Grade 7 Grade 7 EMC 2837 Correlated to State and Common Core State Standards • 36 lessons, each includes: - 4 related paragraphs with capitalization, punctuation, spelling, & language errors - a writing prompt • Student & teacher resources: - proofreading marks - language handbook - full-size editing key Correlated to State and Common Core State Standar Standards Two resources to help save you time and money. Visit teaching-standards.com to view a correlation of this book. Daily Paragraph Editing Student Book 5-Packs Save up to 30% on copying costs and say goodbye to the hassle of photocopying activities for every student in your class. Student practice books are an easy way to save money while also providing all of your students with their very own book. Grade 2 EMC 6551 Grade 6 EMC 6555 Grade 3 EMC 6552 Grade 7 EMC 6737 Grade 4 EMC 6553 Grade 8 EMC 6738 Grade 5 EMC 6554 Student practice books are a sole source product and are only available for purchase directly from Evan-Moor Educational Publishers. To purchase student books visit www.evan-moor.com. Try this APP for FREE evan-moor.com/apps Daily Paragraph Editing Interactive Classroom App Enhance instruction with interactive apps! • • • • 180 interactive lessons Self-correcting Guided skills practice Works with any computer, interactive whiteboard, or projection system Grade 2 EMC 5622 Grade 6 EMC 5626 Grade 3 EMC 5623 Grade 7 EMC 5657 Grade 4 EMC 5624 Grade 8 EMC 5658 Grade 5 EMC 5625 Thank you for purchasing an Evan-Moor e-book! Attention Acrobat Reader Users: In order to use this e-book you need to have Adobe Reader 8 or higher. To download Adobe Reader for free, visit www.adobe.com. Using This E-book This e-book can be used in a variety of ways to enrich your classroom instruction. You can: • engage students by projecting this e-book onto an interactive whiteboard • save paper by printing out only the pages you need • find what you need by performing a keyword search … and much more! For helpful teaching suggestions and creative ideas on how you can use the features of this e-book to enhance your classroom instruction, visit www.evan-moor.com/ebooks. User Agreement With the purchase of Evan-Moor electronic materials, you are granted a single-user license which entitles you to use or duplicate the content of this electronic book for use within your classroom or home only. Sharing materials or making copies for additional individuals or schools is prohibited. Evan-Moor Corporation retains full intellectual property rights on all its products, and these rights extend to electronic editions of books. If you would like to use this Evan-Moor e-book for additional purposes not outlined in the single-user license (described above), please visit www.evan-moor.com/help/copyright.aspx for an Application to Use Copyrighted Materials form. This page intentionally left blank 7 Writing: Emily Hutchinson Content Editing: Robin Kelly Lisa Vitarisi Mathews Teera Safi Copy Editing: Cathy Harber Art Direction: Cheryl Puckett Art Resources: Kathy Kopp Cover Design: Cheryl Puckett Design/Production: Carolina Caird Susan Lovell EMC 2837 Visit teaching-standards.com to view a correlation of this book. This is a free service. Correlated to State and Common Core State Standards Congratulations on your purchase of some of the finest teaching materials in the world. Photocopying the pages in this book is permitted for single-classroom use only. Making photocopies for additional classes or schools is prohibited. For information about other Evan-Moor products, call 1-800-777-4362, fax 1-800-777-4332, or visit our Web site, www.evan-moor.com. Entire contents © 2013 EVAN-MOOR CORP. 18 Lower Ragsdale Drive, Monterey, CA 93940-5746. Printed in USA. CPSIA: Printed by McNaughton & Gunn, Saline, MI USA. [10/2012] 2837_0_FM.indd 1 10/4/12 2:30 PM Contents 4 6 9 11 Introduction How to Use Daily Paragraph Editing Skills Scope and Sequence Assessment Rubric Week 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 2 2837.indb 2 Writing Form Compare-and-Contrast Essay How-to Article Social Studies Article Myth Science Article Historical Fiction Fable Science Article Realistic Fiction History Article Short Story Geography Article Technology Article Journal Entry History Article Science Article Biography History Article Anecdote Science Article Informal Letter News Article Biography History Article Mystery Tall Tale Interview Realistic Fiction Title Artful Defense How to Use Chopsticks Immigration and Ellis Island Echo and Narcissus Sweet Insects Leaving Ireland The King’s Cupcakes A Natural Home Student Elections The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire The Snake Charmer A Sea That’s Not a Sea Georges Méliès, Film Pioneer Diary of a Science Genius Shipwreck! The Amazing Spider The French Spider-Man Champions of Equality Four Days Without a Cellphone Pink Flamingos Four Letters Harbor Porpoises Make Comeback Billy Fisher, Pony Express Rider Balto The Mystery of the Space Rocks Pecos Bill Rides a Tornado Chasing Twisters The Community Garden 12 16 20 24 28 32 36 40 44 48 52 56 60 64 68 72 76 80 84 88 92 96 100 104 108 112 116 120 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Week 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 Writing Form Health Article Science Article Fable Informative Essay Science Article Descriptive Essay Persuasive Essay Book Review Title Time to Sleep A Royal Butterfly The Fox and the Goat Who Was Aesop? Tortoises Bounce Back The Taj Mahal Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? Bud, Not Buddy Friday Writing Prompts Weeks 1–6 Weeks 7–12 Weeks 13–18 Weeks 19–24 Weeks 25–30 Weeks 31–36 Proofreading Marks Language Handbook: Basic Rules for Writing and Editing © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 3 124 128 132 136 140 144 148 152 156 158 160 162 164 166 168 169 3 9/26/12 12:49 PM Introduction Why Daily Paragraph Editing? This book is designed to help students master and retain grade-level skills in language mechanics and expression through focused, daily practice. The passages represent the writing forms that students encounter in their daily reading and writing activities across the curriculum. A weekly writing activity allows students to apply the skills they have been practicing throughout the week. What’s in This Book? Daily Paragraph Editing contains lessons for 36 weeks, with a separate lesson for each day. Each week’s lessons for Monday through Thursday consist of individual reproducible paragraphs that contain errors in the following skills: • capitalization • language usage • punctuation • spelling, and more Each Friday lesson consists of a writing prompt that directs students to write in response to the week’s composition. This gives students the opportunity to apply the skills they have practiced during the week in their own writing. Students gain experience writing in a variety of forms, with the support of familiar models. How Does It Work? Students correct the errors in each daily portion of the composition by marking directly on the page. A reproducible sheet of Proofreading Marks (see page 168) helps familiarize students with the standard form for marking corrections on written text. Full-page Editing Keys show corrections for all errors. Error Summaries help teachers identify the targeted skills in each week’s lessons so teachers can plan to review or introduce the specific skills needed by their students. A reproducible Language Handbook (pages 169–176) outlines the usage and mechanics rules for students to follow as they edit. The Handbook includes examples to help familiarize students with how the conventions of language and mechanics are applied in authentic writing. When corrected and read together, the paragraphs that make up the week’s lesson form a cohesive composition that also serves as a writing model for students. The compositions cover a broad range of expository and narrative writing forms from across the curriculum, including the following: • nonfiction texts on grade-level topics in science and social studies • biographies, book reviews, persuasive essays, journal entries, and letters • myths, fables, historical fiction, personal narratives, and realistic fiction 4 2837.indb 4 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Student’s daily lesson pages for Monday through Thursday Indicates the writing form modeled in the weekly lesson Daily Paragraph Editing PERSUASIVE ESSAY: Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? Name Identifies the day and week MONDAY Week 35 Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? Alerts students to skills that may be more challenging • abbreviations Physical fitness is important to good health, and offerring physical education (P.E.) classes give students the chance to get in shape, stay in shape, compeat in sports and • verbs • hyphens • end punctuation release energy each day. But how important is PE as a school Provides text with errors for students to correct subject. Ultimitely, the grades you receive in P.E. affect your FRIDAY – WEEK 34 Descriptive Essay: The Taj Mahal overall grade point average (GPA. That isn’t fair. Given that P.E.Taj isn’t an academic subject.piece In my opinion, only subjects The Mahal is an impressive of architecture. In one or two paragraphs, describe familiar building, bridge, or should other structure that you think is such as a Math Science History andtower, English count, impressive. Focus on the appearance of the structure and the materials used in its because those are the only ones that lead to accademic construction. You may also want to include details about the history and purpose of success. P.E. grades should not affect your g p a. the structure. TUESDAY Friday writing prompts Identifies the week Prompts students to write a composition in the same form as the weekly lesson Provides sample lead sentences to support reluctant writers Week 35 One reason that P.E. grades should not count, is that people have different physical capabilties. Some students • abbreviations words that Persuasive Essay: Should P.E.• Affect Your GPA? FRIDAY – WEEK 35 perform good in p.e. class, but others do not. What about compare • double negatives students who health problems, such asessay asthma orargues the opposite Write one or twohave paragraphs for a persuasive that end punctuation viewpoint that of “Should P.E. Affect GPA?” Begin withas one of• the following anemia. to They may not be able to run Your as fast, nor as far sentences, or write your own: Indicates the writing form and the title of the weekly lesson Provides hints to help students address skills specific to the writing form more healthy kids can. Supportors of the current gradeing • Physical education is just as important as math, science, history, and English. policy may argue, that people have different acaddemic • Physical teaches teamwork, abilities, too. education Thats true, but arent those self-discipline, the very skills and sportsmanship. • For some students, education classesGetting provideinto the only opportunity that should count towardphysical academic acheivement. they’ll ever have to experience different sports. Advanced Placement a.p. classes or into a good college should not depend on how well you do in P.E. 149 © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing FRIDAY – WEEK 36 Book Review: Bud, Not Buddy Teacher’s full-sized annotated Editing Write one or two paragraphsKey for a review of a book or story that you have read Indicates the writing form modeled in the weekly lesson Identifies the day and week recently. State the title and author. Give a brief summary of the plot. Describe the characters, setting, and central themes. You may want to describe one or two key events, too. Include your opinion of the book or story, but support your statements EDITING KEY: Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? PERSUASIVE ESSAY with meaningful facts from the text, such as carefully chosen quotations. Include information that might prompt readers to seek that book—or to choose a different book instead. MONDAY Week 35 Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? Physical fitness is important to good health, and offering offerring (P.E.) classes © Evan-Moor Corp. physical • EMC 2837 education • Daily Paragraph Editing gives give students the compete chance to get in shape, stay in shape, compeat in sports and Shows the student text with corrections marked in red. (See page 168 for proofreading marks.) release energy each day. But how important is PE as a school Ultimately subject. Ultimitely, the grades you receive in P.E. affect your Error Summary Capitalization 7 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Comma Hyphen 5 167 1 Parentheses 1 Period 2 Question Mark Spelling 1 4 / overall grade point average (GPA. That isn’t fair. Given that P.E. isn’t an academic subject. In my opinion, only subjects / / / Indicates the writing form Summarizes the errors in the day’s lesson by category (Some students may be more successful if you share the Error Summary with them before they read and edit the paragraph.) such as Math Science History and English should count, academic because those are the only ones that lead to accademic success. P.E. grades should not affect your g p a. TUESDAY Week 35 One reason that P.E. grades should © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing capabilities not count, is that people have different physical capabilties. Some students well perform good in p.e. class, but others do not. What about students who have health problems, such as asthma or or 2837_0_FM.indd 5 anemia. They may not be able to run as fast, nor as far as healthier Supporters grading more healthy kids can. Supportors of the current gradeing Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 3 5 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 3 Parentheses 2 Question Mark 2 Spelling 5 10/3/12 8:41 AM How to Use Daily Paragraph Editing You can use Daily Paragraph Editing with the whole class or assign lessons for individual practice. Presentation strategies are outlined below. Find the approach that works best for you and your students. It’s a good idea, though, to reproduce and distribute all four daily lessons for a given week on Monday. That way, students can use the previous day’s lesson for reference as the week progresses. Directed Group Lessons The Daily Paragraph Editing lessons will be most successful if you introduce each one as a group activity. Have students mark up their copies as you work through the lesson together. Continue presenting the Monday through Thursday lessons to the entire class until you are confident that students are familiar with the editing process. Try one of the following methods to direct group lessons: Option 1 Display the day’s editing lesson using a projection system. Read the text aloud just as it is written, including all of the errors. Read it a second time, using phrasing and intonation that would be appropriate if all punctuation were correct. Guide students in correcting errors; mark the corrections on the displayed page. Encourage students to discuss the reason for each correction; explain or clarify any rules that are unfamiliar. Option 2 Display the day’s lesson using a projection system. Work with students to focus on one type of error at a time, correcting all errors of the same type (e.g., capitalization, commas, subject/verb agreement, spelling). Refer to the Error Summary in the Editing Key to help you identify the various types of errors. Option 3 Conduct a mini-lesson on one or more of the skills emphasized in that day’s lesson—for example, run-on sentences or commas to separate coordinate adjectives. This is especially appropriate for new or unfamiliar skills, or for skills that are especially challenging or confusing for students (such as misplaced or dangling modifiers). After introducing a specific skill, use the approach outlined in Option 2 to focus on that skill in one or more of the week’s daily paragraphs. To provide additional practice, refer to the Skills Scope & Sequence (pages 9 and 10) to find other compositions that include that target skill. 6 2837.indb 6 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Individual Practice Once students are familiar with the process for editing the daily paragraphs, they may work on their own or with a partner to make corrections. Be sure students have their Proofreading Marks available to help them mark their corrections. Remind students to refer to the student Language Handbook as needed for guidance in the rules of mechanics and usage. Some students may find it helpful to know at the outset the number and types of errors they are seeking. Provide this information by referring to the Error Summary on the annotated Editing Key pages. Customizing Instruction Some of the skills covered in Daily Paragraph Editing may not be part of the grade-level expectancies in the language program you use. Some skills may even be taught differently in your program from the way they are modeled in Daily Paragraph Editing. In such cases, follow the approach used in your program. Simply revise the paragraph text as needed (using correction fluid or tape and then writing changes) before you reproduce pages for students. Occasionally, you or your students may make a correction that differs from that shown in the Editing Key. The decision to use an exclamation mark instead of a period, or a period instead of a semicolon, is often a subjective decision made by individual writers. When discrepancies of this sort arise, capitalize on the “teachable moment” to let students know that there are gray areas in English usage and mechanics, and discuss how each of the possible correct choices can affect the meaning or tone of the writing. Using the Writing Prompts Have students keep their daily lessons in a folder so they can review the week’s corrected paragraphs on Friday. Identify the writing form modeled in the composition and any of its special features (e.g., dialogue in fiction, an opinion statement in a persuasive essay, or a salutation in a letter). Present the Friday writing prompt using a projection system, or distribute copies to students. Take a few minutes to brainstorm ideas with the group and to focus on language skills that students will need to address in their writing. After students have completed their writing, encourage them to use an editing checklist (see page 8 for ideas) to review or revise their work. You may also want to have partners review each other’s writing. To conduct a more formal assessment of students’ writing, use the Assessment Rubric on page 11. If you assign paragraph writing as homework, make sure that students have the daily lessons (with corrections) for that week available for reference. Students may need to reflect on the content as well as the form to complete the writing assignment. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 7 7 9/26/12 12:49 PM Creating an Editing Checklist You may want to develop an editing checklist with the class. Post the checklist in the classroom and encourage students to use it as they revise their own writing or critique a partner’s efforts. Here are some items for your checklist: • Does each proper noun begin with a capital letter? • Does each sentence end with a period, a question mark, or an exclamation point? • Did I use an apostrophe correctly in a contraction? • Did I use an apostrophe correctly to show possession? • Did I place commas where they are needed? • Did I use the correct word of two or more homonyms? • Does the verb in each sentence agree with the subject? • Are my sentences clear and complete? • Are there any spelling errors? Assessment Rubric for Evaluating Friday Paragraph Writing The Friday writing prompts give students the opportunity to apply the capitalization, punctuation, and language usage skills they practiced during the week’s editing tasks. They also require students to write in a variety of forms. In evaluating the Friday paragraphs, you may want to focus exclusively on students’ mastery of mechanics and usage, or you may want to conduct a more global assessment of their writing. The rubric on page 11 offers broad guidelines for evaluating the composition as a whole. You may want to share the rubric with students so they know what is expected of them. 8 2837.indb 8 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 9 9 9/26/12 12:49 PM To set off appositives To separate coordinate adjectives In dates In compound sentences In complex sentences Improperly placed comma Between items in a series Between city and state, city and country names After salutation and closing in a letter After introductory words or phrases After introductory interjections or expressions Punctuation: Commas Improperly placed apostrophes To form possessives To form contractions Punctuation: Apostrophes Verbs and verb tenses, including irregular and passive forms Subject-verb agreement and plural usage Pronouns and possessives (its, our, whose, etc.) Inappropriate double negatives Comparative and superlative adjectives Commonly mistaken words (affect/effect, then/than, etc.) Articles Adverbs Language Usage Titles of books, magazines, stories, movies, TV shows Place names, organizations, other proper nouns Nouns used as names (Aunt, Grandpa, etc.) Names and titles, languages, nationalities, geographic identities Initials, acronyms, abbreviations Inappropriate capitalization Holidays, historic events, eras, historical documents Days and months Beginning of sentences, quotations, salutations/closings Capitalization Skills Scope and Sequence • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 Weeks 10 2837.indb 10 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Identify errors in grade-level words Spelling Misplaced and dangling modifiers Sentence Structure Underline titles of books, magazines, movies, newspapers, etc. Underline scientific names, foreign words, ship names, etc. Semicolon to join two independent clauses Question mark Punctuation with parentheses or brackets Punctuation inside quotation marks Parentheses and brackets Improperly placed hyphen Hyphen to form adjectives or spelled-out numbers Hyphen in fractions Exclamation point Ellipses for pause or omission Colon to show time Punctuation: Other With titles of articles, poems, short stories, songs, etc. To set apart special words or phrases In dialogue, speech, excerpts Improperly placed quotation mark Punctuation: Quotation Marks In abbreviations of names, measurements, scientific names, etc. Improperly placed period At end of sentence Punctuation: Periods With name used in direct address To set off quotations To set off interruptions Punctuation: Commas (continued) Skills Scope and Sequence (continued) • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 • • • • • • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 • • • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 • • • • • • • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 Weeks Assessment Rubric EXCELLENT FAIR WEAK Writing is loosely focused on the topic. Writing is unclear and unfocused. Development of Main Ideas Main ideas are Main ideas are clear, specific, and identifiable but well-developed. may be somewhat general. Main ideas are overly broad or simplistic. Main ideas are unclear or not expressed. Organization is clear but may be predictable or formulaic. Organization is attempted but is often unclear. Organization is not coherent. Organization Organization is clear (beginning, middle, and end) and fits the topic and writing form. Details are relevant, specific, and well-placed. Details are relevant but may be overly general. Details may be off-topic, predictable, or not specific enough. Details are absent or insufficient to support main ideas. Vocabulary Vocabulary is exceptionally rich, varied, and well-chosen. Vocabulary is colorful and generally avoids clichés. Vocabulary is ordinary and may rely on clichés. Vocabulary is limited, general, or vague. Mechanics and Usage Demonstrates exceptionally strong command of conventions of punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and usage. Demonstrates adequate control of conventions of punctuation, capitalization, spelling, and usage. Errors in the conventions of mechanics and language usage distract but do not impede the reader. Limited ability to control conventions of mechanics and language usage impairs readability of the composition. Clarity and Focus Use of Details Writing is exceptionally clear, focused, and interesting. GOOD Writing is generally clear, focused, and interesting. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 11 11 9/26/12 12:49 PM compare-and-contrast essay EDITING KEY: Artful Defense MONDAY Week 1 Error Summary Artful Defense Capitalization 4 Language Usage 3 A martial art is a system of self-defents that can Punctuation: defense practice also be a competitive sport. People practices martial arts for discipline fitness development physical fitnes, mental dissiplin, spiritual developpment, and Comma 2 Period 1 Spelling 6 other reasons. Some martial arts, such as tai chi (ty chee), breathing also teaches healing skills, including deep breatheing and meditation. Most martial arts practiced today, including judo, have karate, and jujitsu, has their origins in China korea or japan. movies In modern times, asian and american moovies have increased the popularity of martial arts. This essay looks at two popular forms of martial arts: taekwondo and kung fu TUESDAY Week 1 Taekwondo is a Korean art of unarmed combat. The means method korean word taekwondo mean “methid of kicking or punching.” named This modern sport has ancient roots but was name only in million 1955. Thirty milyun people world wide practice this popular deliver / Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 2 Spelling 8 sport. Students of Taekwondo learn to delliver fast powerful and high kicks, sometimes while spinning or jumping. They learn their also learns to strike with they fists and to block, or avoid, an opponents kick or hit. When partners spar, or practice making together, they kick or strike without completely makeing contact Individuals contack. That way, they don’t hurt each other. Indivijiuls target can also practice by using a targete. 12 2837.indb 12 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing COMPARE-AND-CONTRAST ESSAY: Artful Defense Name MONDAY Week 1 Artful Defense A martial art is a system of self-defents that can also be a competitive sport. People practices martial arts for • place names • cultural identities • verbs physical fitnes, mental dissiplin, spiritual developpment, and other reasons. Some martial arts, such as tai chi (ty chee), also teaches healing skills, including deep breatheing and meditation. Most martial arts practiced today, including judo, karate, and jujitsu, has their origins in China korea or japan. In modern times, asian and american moovies have increased the popularity of martial arts. This essay looks at two popular forms of martial arts: taekwondo and kung fu TUESDAY Week 1 Taekwondo is a Korean art of unarmed combat. The korean word taekwondo mean “methid of kicking or punching.” This modern sport has ancient roots but was name only in 1955. Thirty milyun people world wide practice this popular • names of languages • verbs • commas • possessives sport. Students of Taekwondo learn to delliver fast powerful and high kicks, sometimes while spinning or jumping. They also learns to strike with they fists and to block, or avoid, an opponents kick or hit. When partners spar, or practice together, they kick or strike without completely makeing contack. That way, they don’t hurt each other. Indivijiuls can also practice by using a targete. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 13 13 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Artful Defense (cont.) compare-and-contrast essay WEDNESDAY Week 1 Like taekwondo, kung fu is mostly an unarmed form of Error Summary Capitalization 2 Punctuation: combat. Kung fu, also called wushu was developed more than Comma 7 2,000 years ago in china. The chinese word kung fu means Quotation Mark 1 meaning “skill gained from hard work.” The original meening refers to Underlined Words 1 Spelling 6 any skill, not just to martial arts. The Chinese word wushu, though thogh, means martial arts.” learn Kung fu students lern poses and meditation as well as how to kick punch throw jump and roll. Some techniques imitate immitate the movements of animals such as tigers snakes and leopards. There are hundreds of kung fu styles; some weapons styles stiles include wepons such as swords and sticks. THURSDAY are Week 1 Taekwondo and kung fu are both martial arts but there Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 5 is many differences between them. One is korean, and one Punctuation: is Chinese. Both has ainshunt origins, but kung fu is older. Comma 4 Period 1 have ancient involve Both involves kicking, punching and jumping although kung fu are Spelling 6 can include weapons. Both is competitive sports, each with strict participants has injured strick rules so participints don’t get injerd. Taekwondo have a formal system of ranking, with different belt colors to indicate indecate the level. What matters most in kung fu is how many years students study and how hard they practice? Perhaps most important people can practice either of these inner martial arts for fitness, self-discipline, and iner strength. 14 2837.indb 14 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing COMPARE-AND-CONTRAST ESSAY: Artful Defense (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 1 Like taekwondo, kung fu is mostly an unarmed form of combat. Kung fu, also called wushu was developed more than • place names 2,000 years ago in china. The chinese word kung fu means • words that are defined “skill gained from hard work.” The original meening refers to • foreign words any skill, not just to martial arts. The Chinese word wushu, thogh, means martial arts.” Kung fu students lern poses and meditation as well as how to kick punch throw jump and roll. Some techniques immitate the movements of animals such as tigers snakes and leopards. There are hundreds of kung fu styles; some stiles include wepons such as swords and sticks. THURSDAY Week 1 Taekwondo and kung fu are both martial arts but there is many differences between them. One is korean, and one is Chinese. Both has ainshunt origins, but kung fu is older. • commas • verbs • end punctuation Both involves kicking, punching and jumping although kung fu can include weapons. Both is competitive sports, each with strick rules so participints don’t get injerd. Taekwondo have a formal system of ranking, with different belt colors to indecate the level. What matters most in kung fu is how many years students study and how hard they practice? Perhaps most important people can practice either of these martial arts for fitness, self-discipline, and iner strength. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 15 15 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: How to Use Chopsticks HOW-TO ARTICLE MONDAY Week 2 How to Use Chopsticks Chopsticks originated in China about 5,000 years ago. They are still the most common eating utensils through out china, japan, korea, and Vietnam, as well as in many regions accustomed where chinese immigrants settled. People who are acustemmed Error Summary Capitalization 5 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 4 Period 1 Spelling 4 to using forks knives and spoons sometimes find it difficult at first to use chopsticks. With practice, though anyone can utensil master their use. Chopsticks are a pinching type of utensul so its a good idea to practice with bite-sized foods or sticky Larger are foods, like sushi, that is easy to pick up. Largest foods, such awkward / as Steak, are awkwerd to pick up with pinchers TUESDAY Week 2 follow To master the use of chopsticks, folow these steps: 1. Hold the first chopstick near the middle of the stick, with the narrow part pointing down like the tip of a pencil. Adjust position 2. Ajust your finger positiun so the narrow part of the stick is against the tips of your middle, and ring fingers. The knuckle Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Comma 1 Period 1 Quotation Mark 2 Spelling 7 / wider end will rest near the knuckel of your Index finger. thumb Press against the stick with your thum. hold 3. Pick up the “second” chopstick and held it between the tip tip of your index finger and the tib of your thumb your 4. bend or extend you’re index finger to move the second chopstick. the first chopstick should not never move. 16 2837.indb 16 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM HOW-TO ARTICLE: How to Use Chopsticks Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 2 How to Use Chopsticks Chopsticks originated in China about 5,000 years ago. They are still the most common eating utensils through out • commas • place names china, japan, korea, and Vietnam, as well as in many regions where chinese immigrants settled. People who are acustemmed to using forks knives and spoons sometimes find it difficult at first to use chopsticks. With practice, though anyone can master their use. Chopsticks are a pinching type of utensul so its a good idea to practice with bite-sized foods or sticky foods, like sushi, that is easy to pick up. Largest foods, such as Steak, are awkwerd to pick up with pinchers TUESDAY Week 2 To master the use of chopsticks, folow these steps: 1. Hold the first chopstick near the middle of the stick, with the narrow part pointing down like the tip of a pencil. • commas • quotation marks • double negatives 2. Ajust your finger positiun so the narrow part of the stick is against the tips of your middle, and ring fingers. The wider end will rest near the knuckel of your Index finger. Press against the stick with your thum. 3. Pick up the “second” chopstick and held it between the tip of your index finger and the tib of your thumb 4. bend or extend you’re index finger to move the second chopstick. the first chopstick should not never move. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 17 17 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: How to Use Chopsticks (cont.) HOW-TO ARTICLE WEDNESDAY Week 2 additional Here are some aditional tips to keep in mind as you confidence practice. They will help you use chopsticks with confidense. 1. Line up the ends of your chopsticks so they are even. close That way, the tips will come together when they closes, bits easily Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 6 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Period 1 Spelling 5 allowing you to grab bitts of food more easy It also prevents prevent the chopsticks from crossing each other and an forming a X. angle were 2. Tilt your wrist at an angel, as if you was using a spoon. vertically Dont hold your chopsticks verticly. littlest 3. Don’t use your pinky finger (the littler finger) as you grip / the Chopsticks. Instead, relax that finger. THURSDAY Week 2 Its also important to adhere to certain rules of are chopsticks etiquette when using chopstix. The following actions is offend considered rude and could affend fellow diners. Avoid: • • stabbing or spearing food with your chopsticks scooping / scouping up food (except Rice with your chopsticks pushing • pulling or pushin a dish with your chopstick’s • sucking on or biting your chopsticks • pointing with your chopsticks, gesturing with them or upright 1 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 1 Parentheses 1 Spelling 7 a • placing chopsticks upwrite in an bowl of rice • laying your chopsticks directly on the tabble 2837.indb 18 Capitalization waving waveing them around 18 Error Summary table Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing HOW-TO ARTICLE: How to Use Chopsticks (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 2 Here are some aditional tips to keep in mind as you practice. They will help you use chopsticks with confidense. 1. Line up the ends of your chopsticks so they are even. That way, the tips will come together when they closes, • apostrophes • adverbs • articles • verbs allowing you to grab bitts of food more easy It also prevent the chopsticks from crossing each other and forming a X. 2. Tilt your wrist at an angel, as if you was using a spoon. Dont hold your chopsticks verticly. 3. Don’t use your pinky finger (the littler finger) as you grip the Chopsticks. Instead, relax that finger. THURSDAY Week 2 Its also important to adhere to certain rules of etiquette when using chopstix. The following actions is considered rude and could affend fellow diners. Avoid: • stabbing or spearing food with your chopsticks • scouping up food (except Rice with your chopsticks • pulling or pushin a dish with your chopstick’s • sucking on or biting your chopsticks • pointing with your chopsticks, gesturing with them or • parentheses • apostrophes • verbs waveing them around • placing chopsticks upwrite in an bowl of rice • laying your chopsticks directly on the tabble © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 19 19 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Immigration and Ellis Island social studies articLE MONDAY Week 3 Immigration and Ellis Island Capitalization 4 Punctuation: / The greatest mass movement of people in History occurred Error Summary ocurred between 1870 and 1910. During that time, more emigrated than twenty million people emmigrated from europe to the Comma 5 Period 1 Quotation Mark 3 Spelling 4 united states. People left their homelands for many reasons Historians call these reasons “pushes”. Pushes include natural disasters dissasters crop failures war persecution and poverty. A push might also be the urge for adventure or the desire for change. People who emigrate go to places where they think they will have a better happier future for themselves and their they’re families. Historians call these reasons pulls. TUESDAY Week 3 Between 1870 and 1900 about twelve million people arrived in the United States from other countries. Most came from europe. Another nine million arrived over the next previous decade (three fourths as many as during the prevous three decades). Most immigrants entered the country through new Error Summary Capitalization 6 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Comma 5 Hyphen 1 Period 1 Spelling 4 allowed York. Before they were aloud into the city they had to go through threw the immigration center located on ellis i sland which is in Upper New York Bay. The statue of l iberty in the bay seemed to welcome the passengers. Not everyone however inspectors was were truly welcome. The inspecters at Ellis Island would who decide whom could enter the country 20 2837.indb 20 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM SOCIAL STUDIES ARTICLE: Immigration and Ellis Island Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 3 Immigration and Ellis Island The greatest mass movement of people in History ocurred between 1870 and 1910. During that time, more than twenty million people emmigrated from europe to the united states. People left their homelands for many reasons • commas • place names • punctuation with quotation marks • special words in quotation marks Historians call these reasons “pushes”. Pushes include natural dissasters crop failures war persecution and poverty. A push might also be the urge for adventure or the desire for change. People who emigrate go to places where they think they will have a better happier future for themselves and they’re families. Historians call these reasons pulls. TUESDAY Week 3 Between 1870 and 1900 about twelve million people arrived in the United States from other countries. Most • names of monuments came from europe. Another nine million arrived over the next • hyphens decade (three fourths as many as during the prevous three • pronouns decades). Most immigrants entered the country through new York. Before they were aloud into the city they had to go threw the immigration center located on ellis island which is in Upper New York Bay. The statue of liberty in the bay seemed to welcome the passengers. Not everyone however were truly welcome. The inspecters at Ellis Island would decide whom could enter the country © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 21 21 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Immigration and Ellis Island (cont.) social studies articLE WEDNESDAY Week 3 Ellis Island was named for its original owner a man tavern by the name of samuel ellis he operated a tavvern for local fishermen piece fisherman on the island. Before that, the sandy peace of land was known to new yorkers as gibbet i sland a gibbet was a gallows-like structure from which criminals, such as pirates Error Summary Capitalization 13 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 4 Period 2 Spelling 6 were hanged. Occasionally in the 1700s, pirates were hanged shore from trees on the islands shor. Earlier the island was known colonists by other names. The dutch collonists who settled in new york around 1630 called the island oyster i sland because of oyster source the nearby oister beds which had been a souce of food for people in the area for many decades. THURSDAY Week 3 government the federal goverment took over the island in 1892. Error Summary Capitalization 5 Punctuation: From that time until 1954, when the immigration center Apostrophe 1 clozed, twelve million immigrants past through ellis i sland: Comma 2 Exclamation Point 1 Hyphen 1 Question Mark 1 closed passed four fifths of all immigrants entering the country. Thats experience astonishing So, what was the immigrant expereince like. First, their immigrants entered a huge hall and left they’re bags. Then Spelling 7 past they lined up and filed passed inspectors. If rejected, they could be sent back to their home countries. Most however passed through the center within hours. Ferries ran back and forth fourth around the clock, taking the immigrants to manhattan to start their new lives in america. 22 2837.indb 22 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM SOCIAL STUDIES ARTICLE: Immigration and Ellis Island (cont.) Daily Paragraph Editing Name WEDNESDAY Week 3 Ellis Island was named for its original owner a man by the name of samuel ellis he operated a tavvern for local fisherman on the island. Before that, the sandy peace of land was known to new yorkers as gibbet island a gibbet was a gallows-like structure from which criminals, such as pirates • place names • personal names • geographic identities • run-on sentences were hanged. Occasionally in the 1700s, pirates were hanged from trees on the islands shor. Earlier the island was known by other names. The dutch collonists who settled in new york around 1630 called the island oyster island because of the nearby oister beds which had been a souce of food for people in the area for many decades. THURSDAY Week 3 the federal goverment took over the island in 1892. From that time until 1954, when the immigration center clozed, twelve million immigrants past through ellis island: four fifths of all immigrants entering the country. Thats • place names • commas • hyphens • end punctuation astonishing So, what was the immigrant expereince like. First, immigrants entered a huge hall and left they’re bags. Then they lined up and filed passed inspectors. If rejected, they could be sent back to their home countries. Most however passed through the center within hours. Ferries ran back and fourth around the clock, taking the immigrants to manhattan to start their new lives in america. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 23 23 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Echo and Narcissus myth MONDAY Week 4 Error Summary Echo and Narcissus Capitalization 1 Language Usage 2 Mount Olympus was home to the greek gods. Zeus Punctuation: sacred chief was cheif of the gods. The sacrid Mount Helicon was home to the nymphs, whose job was to tend to Zeus’s wife Hera. Apostrophe 1 Comma 2 Spelling 8 When the nymphs were not working, they liked to play near sparkling forests the sparkeling waterfalls and wooded forrests at the base of merriest Mount Helicon. Of all the nymphs Echo was the merrier and best amuse also the better storyteller. Sometimes Echo would ammuse Hera while Zeus came down from Mount Olympus to join the goddess adventures nymphs in their advenchures. Echos stories kept the godess jealous occupied so she would forget to be jealus. TUESDAY Week 4 Among the nymphs, Echo was one of Heras favorite’s. easily Perhaps thats why the goddess was so easy tricked by her. calmly Hera would smile calm at Echo and ask What tale do you have for me today. Echo, sitting at Hera’s feet would begin were to spin her tale. Her stories and her chatter was always quickly entertaining, and the time would slip by quick as Hera friends listened Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 4 Comma 2 Exclamation Point 1 Question Mark 2 Quotation Mark 4 Spelling 5 lissened. Meanwhile, Echo’s freinds enjoyed themselves without worrying that Hera would interrupt them. One day, Hera discovered Echos trick. Full of wrath, she cried, how dare deceive special you decieve me in this way I have a speshul punishment for hear you! Do you want to here what it is. 24 2837.indb 24 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM MYTH: Echo and Narcissus Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 4 Echo and Narcissus Mount Olympus was home to the greek gods. Zeus was cheif of the gods. The sacrid Mount Helicon was home to the nymphs, whose job was to tend to Zeus’s wife Hera. • nationalities • apostrophes • words that compare When the nymphs were not working, they liked to play near the sparkeling waterfalls and wooded forrests at the base of Mount Helicon. Of all the nymphs Echo was the merrier and also the better storyteller. Sometimes Echo would ammuse Hera while Zeus came down from Mount Olympus to join the nymphs in their advenchures. Echos stories kept the godess occupied so she would forget to be jealus. TUESDAY Week 4 Among the nymphs, Echo was one of Heras favorite’s. Perhaps thats why the goddess was so easy tricked by her. Hera would smile calm at Echo and ask What tale do you have for me today. Echo, sitting at Hera’s feet would begin • apostrophes • dialogue • end punctuation • adverbs to spin her tale. Her stories and her chatter was always entertaining, and the time would slip by quick as Hera lissened. Meanwhile, Echo’s freinds enjoyed themselves without worrying that Hera would interrupt them. One day, Hera discovered Echos trick. Full of wrath, she cried, how dare you decieve me in this way I have a speshul punishment for you! Do you want to here what it is. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 25 25 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Echo and Narcissus (cont.) MYTH WEDNESDAY Week 4 frightened The frightend Echo simply nodded. Hera continued to angrily Error Summary Language Usage 2 Punctuation: proclaim angry, The gift that you have used to trick me shall Apostrophe 1 be yours no longer! From this moment on you will not be able Comma 1 Quotation Mark 4 spoken to speak until someone else has spoke. Then, even if you Spelling 4 wish to remain silent, you will be forced to repeat the last heard words you have herd. “Alas!” cried all the nymphs at once. Alas! cried Echo. She could say nothing else, even forgiveness though she longed to beg Heras foregiveness. She could no longer speak to her sisters but was compelled to repeat what whether they said, wether she wanted to or not. THURSDAY Week 4 Echo left for the high slopes of mount helicon to live by her self. One day, a young man named Narcissus became was handsome lost in the woods. He were so hansom that Echo fell in immediately love with him immediate. Narcissus did not return her love. Instead he saw his own reflection in a pond and fell in love his tried Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 5 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Comma 2 Period 1 Spelling 5 fell with it. As he tries to embrace its own image, he falls into drowned the water and drownd. Heartbroken, Echo wept for Narcissus until she wasted away. Even though Echo was gone the power of Heras curse continued. To this day, Echos voice haunt’s repeats rocky hills, caves, and lofty halls, that voice still repetes answering the words it hears, ansering when someone else calls. 26 2837.indb 26 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing MYTH: Echo and Narcissus (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 4 The frightend Echo simply nodded. Hera continued to proclaim angry, The gift that you have used to trick me shall be yours no longer! From this moment on you will not be able • adverbs • verbs • dialogue to speak until someone else has spoke. Then, even if you wish to remain silent, you will be forced to repeat the last words you have herd. “Alas!” cried all the nymphs at once. Alas! cried Echo. She could say nothing else, even though she longed to beg Heras foregiveness. She could no longer speak to her sisters but was compelled to repeat what they said, wether she wanted to or not. THURSDAY Week 4 Echo left for the high slopes of mount helicon to live by her self. One day, a young man named Narcissus became lost in the woods. He were so hansom that Echo fell in • adverbs • verbs • possessives love with him immediate. Narcissus did not return her love. Instead he saw his own reflection in a pond and fell in love with it. As he tries to embrace its own image, he falls into the water and drownd. Heartbroken, Echo wept for Narcissus until she wasted away. Even though Echo was gone the power of Heras curse continued. To this day, Echos voice haunt’s rocky hills, caves, and lofty halls, that voice still repetes the words it hears, ansering when someone else calls. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 27 27 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Sweet Insects science article MONDAY Week 5 Sweet Insects have Honeybees come in different sizes and got slightly characteristics different characteristicks. For example, the bees of one build species (named Apis florea) builds their nests in trees. This Error Summary Capitalization 6 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Underlined Words 8 Spelling 5 is species are found in central asia. The giant honeybee (Apis dorsata), which is found in i ndia, i ndonesia, and parts of honeycombs china, can build honeycomes that are more than nine feet diameter in diammeter. another type of honeybee is the Eastern beekeepers honeybee, or Apis indica, which beekeeppers in parts of most familiar Asia raise. Probably the more familar species of all is the domestic honeybee, or Apis mellifera. TUESDAY Week 5 an length the domestic honeybee is about half a inch in lenth. are / Although there is some variation. There is short stiff hairs on the bee’s head and thorax, which is the middle of the body. The bee has two large compound eyes and three simple eyes. Domestic / Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Comma 5 Period 1 Spelling 8 Which are on top of its head. Dummestic honeybees have excellent detect exellent eyesight. They also have two antennae that detects odor pollen because / oder. Which is important cuz bees need to locate pollin species Although the four honeybee speecies are somewhat have different, they has some things in common. First, they all honey make honie. Second they are all social insects and work together as a group. 28 2837.indb 28 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM SCIENCE ARTICLE: Sweet Insects Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 5 Sweet Insects Honeybees come in different sizes and got slightly different characteristicks. For example, the bees of one • scientific names • geographic regions • verbs species (named Apis florea) builds their nests in trees. This species are found in central asia. The giant honeybee (Apis dorsata), which is found in india, indonesia, and parts of china, can build honeycomes that are more than nine feet in diammeter. another type of honeybee is the Eastern honeybee, or Apis indica, which beekeeppers in parts of Asia raise. Probably the more familar species of all is the domestic honeybee, or Apis mellifera. TUESDAY Week 5 the domestic honeybee is about half a inch in lenth. Although there is some variation. There is short stiff hairs on the bee’s head and thorax, which is the middle of the body. The bee has two large compound eyes and three simple eyes. • commas • incomplete sentences • verbs Which are on top of its head. Dummestic honeybees have exellent eyesight. They also have two antennae that detects oder. Which is important cuz bees need to locate pollin Although the four honeybee speecies are somewhat different, they has some things in common. First, they all make honie. Second they are all social insects and work together as a group. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 29 29 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Sweet Insects (cont.) science article WEDNESDAY Week 5 Honeybees communicate with each other through a pattern patern of movement. They can tell about the location distance size and quality of a food source in the area, the message helps other bees find the same food source. colony A honeybee colonny has three classes, or castes: Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 4 Period 1 Spelling 5 drones, workers, and queens. All of the drones are male. than The workers are female, but are smaller then the queens. lay Both the workers and the queens lays eggs; however, only the queens’ eggs get fertilized. Drone’s live in the colony for purpose brief only a breef season. Their only perpose in the colony is to fertilize fertulize the queens eggs. THURSDAY Week 5 cycle The honeybee’s life sikel has four stages. It takes about three days for the eggs to hatch. The larvae also called grubs remain in their honeycomb cells. The worker bees liquid / feed the grubs a thick milky liguid called royal jelly. Which Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 5 Spelling 8 is produced from glands in the worker bees heads. About a transform week later, the grubs transforum into pupae. Two to three their weeks later, the bees emerge from they’re cells. Queens are emerge the first to emerje, followed by the workers and then the drones themselves droans. once the queens emerge they fight among theirselves survives then until only one servives. The new queen than attacks the old forced queen, which is forst to leave the nest. 30 2837.indb 30 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing SCIENCE ARTICLE: Sweet Insects (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 5 Honeybees communicate with each other through a patern of movement. They can tell about the location distance size and quality of a food source in the area, the message • commas • apostrophes • run-on sentences helps other bees find the same food source. A honeybee colonny has three classes, or castes: drones, workers, and queens. All of the drones are male. The workers are female, but are smaller then the queens. Both the workers and the queens lays eggs; however, only the queens’ eggs get fertilized. Drone’s live in the colony for only a breef season. Their only perpose in the colony is to fertulize the queens eggs. THURSDAY Week 5 The honeybee’s life sikel has four stages. It takes about three days for the eggs to hatch. The larvae also called grubs remain in their honeycomb cells. The worker bees feed the grubs a thick milky liguid called royal jelly. Which • run-on sentences • incomplete sentences • commas is produced from glands in the worker bees heads. About a week later, the grubs transforum into pupae. Two to three weeks later, the bees emerge from they’re cells. Queens are the first to emerje, followed by the workers and then the droans. once the queens emerge they fight among theirselves until only one servives. The new queen than attacks the old queen, which is forst to leave the nest. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 31 31 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Leaving Ireland historical fiction MONDAY Week 6 Leaving Ireland extremely / Life had been extremly hard for the O’Donnell Family potatoes for some time now. Two years ago, the potatos suddenly fields rotted in the feilds. Now, in 1847, the situation was even affected worse worst. It looked as if this years crop also would be effected / Twelve year old Danny was helping his Parents harvest vegetables Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Hyphen 2 Period 2 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 4 Spelling 6 other vegtables from the fields, but they had not planted barely much besides potatoes they bearly had enough food to last week the rest of the weak. Danny, said his father, why dont you take Spot to the lake and see if you can catch a fish for tonights supper TUESDAY Week 6 A stranger watching danny and his dog would think Error Summary Capitalization 3 Punctuation: they didn’t have a care in the world. That stranger would be Apostrophe 2 so wrong, though. Danny was under presher to catch a fish Period 2 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 8 pressure that day. If he didnt, his family would go hungry as soon as Danny was out of earshot, Mr O’Donnell Spelling 7 took his wifes hand. Fiona, he said, I think we should sell sail the farm. That would give us enough money to sale to starve america. We’ll starv if we stay here. You’re right, Patrick, said Fiona. How many of our already death famine neighbors have allready starved to deth. This fammin has toll taken a terrible tole. 32 2837.indb 32 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM HISTORICAL FICTION: Leaving Ireland Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 6 Leaving Ireland Life had been extremly hard for the O’Donnell Family for some time now. Two years ago, the potatos suddenly rotted in the feilds. Now, in 1847, the situation was even • apostrophes • hyphens • run-on sentences • dialogue worst. It looked as if this years crop also would be effected Twelve year old Danny was helping his Parents harvest other vegtables from the fields, but they had not planted much besides potatoes they bearly had enough food to last the rest of the weak. Danny, said his father, why dont you take Spot to the lake and see if you can catch a fish for tonights supper TUESDAY Week 6 A stranger watching danny and his dog would think they didn’t have a care in the world. That stranger would be so wrong, though. Danny was under presher to catch a fish • run-on sentences • apostrophes • dialogue that day. If he didnt, his family would go hungry as soon as Danny was out of earshot, Mr O’Donnell took his wifes hand. Fiona, he said, I think we should sell the farm. That would give us enough money to sale to america. We’ll starv if we stay here. You’re right, Patrick, said Fiona. How many of our neighbors have allready starved to deth. This fammin has taken a terrible tole. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 33 33 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Leaving Ireland (cont.) historical fiction WEDNESDAY Week 6 pains It panes me to say it, Fiona, said Patrick, but I’m unable Error Summary Capitalization 6 Punctuation: afraid the british are either unwilling or unnable to help us. Apostrophe 1 There are many i rish like us in boston, l ets go there. Period 2 Quotation Mark 4 appointed Five weeks later, early in the morning on the apointed family Spelling 6 day, the O’Donnell fammily stood at dock number 7 with their bags and with their dog, spot. They waited patiently until the gangplank was lowered to the dock. Along with wealthy the other passengers, they climbed on bored. The welthy passengers headed for their cabins, the poor ones, like the O’Donnells, headed for the steerage section in the deepest part of the ship. THURSDAY Week 6 After they got settled Danny and his parents went back up on deck. Mr and mrs O’Donnell talked with the opportunities captain who told them about oppurtunities in America. “There’s land for the taking he declared. “Ive heard the same thing, captain,” said Danny’s father. I’ll be first in line when they hand out the land deeds. Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Comma 4 Period 2 Quotation Mark 4 Spelling 2 Dannys mother agreed. “We’ve always been farmers. I don’t think we’ll stay in the city for long. Danny didnt say it aloud but he thought it might be better to try something new. Life in Boston was more attractive than atractive to him then life on a farm. 34 2837.indb 34 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing HISTORICAL FICTION: Leaving Ireland (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 6 It panes me to say it, Fiona, said Patrick, but I’m afraid the british are either unwilling or unnable to help us. There are many irish like us in boston, lets go there. • dialogue • nationalities • run-on sentences Five weeks later, early in the morning on the apointed day, the O’Donnell fammily stood at dock number 7 with their bags and with their dog, spot. They waited patiently until the gangplank was lowered to the dock. Along with the other passengers, they climbed on bored. The welthy passengers headed for their cabins, the poor ones, like the O’Donnells, headed for the steerage section in the deepest part of the ship. THURSDAY Week 6 After they got settled Danny and his parents went back up on deck. Mr and mrs O’Donnell talked with the captain who told them about oppurtunities in America. • personal names • apostrophes • dialogue “There’s land for the taking he declared. “Ive heard the same thing, captain,” said Danny’s father. I’ll be first in line when they hand out the land deeds. Dannys mother agreed. “We’ve always been farmers. I don’t think we’ll stay in the city for long. Danny didnt say it aloud but he thought it might be better to try something new. Life in Boston was more atractive to him then life on a farm. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 35 35 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: The King’s Cupcakes FABLE MONDAY Week 7 The King’s Cupcakes Capitalization Once there was a king who’s happiness was complete except for one thing: No one in his kingdom could make haven’t satisfy 1 Punctuation: whose pumpkin Error Summary tasty punkin cupcakes to satissfy him. “I hav’ent had a tastey Comma 2 Quotation Mark 6 Spelling 10 pumpkin pumkin cupcake since I was a prince, declared the king. For some time this king had been thinking about getting married marry marreyed. I have an idea, said the king. I will mary a woman search who can make pumpkin cupcakes! He began his serch. He kingdom first went to Apple Hill the kingdum to the north. There, he saw queen Appelonia, who was as kind as she was beautiful. “Can you make pumpkin cupcakes? he asked. TUESDAY Week 7 replied No she replyed, but I can make wonderful apple pies.” responded / That wont do,” the king reponded. I want a Queen who can make pumpkin cupcakes. Even so, I enjoyed meeting you.” Next he went to Terra Incognita, the kingdom to the Error Summary Capitalization 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 4 Quotation Mark 11 Spelling 3 south to see Queen Malicious. She was not as kind as she was beautiful, but the king asked, “Can you make cupcakes? spicy No, she said, but my spicey curry sauce is tasty. “I like curry, but I like cupcakes more, the king said. Next, the king went to Zamboni, the kingdom to the /East, to see Queen Plain Jane who was not as beautiful as she was kind. 36 2837.indb 36 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM FABLE: The King’s Cupcakes Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 7 The King’s Cupcakes Once there was a king who’s happiness was complete except for one thing: No one in his kingdom could make punkin cupcakes to satissfy him. “I hav’ent had a tastey • pronouns • personal names • titles of people • dialogue pumkin cupcake since I was a prince, declared the king. For some time this king had been thinking about getting marreyed. I have an idea, said the king. I will mary a woman who can make pumpkin cupcakes! He began his serch. He first went to Apple Hill the kingdum to the north. There, he saw queen Appelonia, who was as kind as she was beautiful. “Can you make pumpkin cupcakes? he asked. TUESDAY Week 7 No she replyed, but I can make wonderful apple pies.” That wont do,” the king reponded. I want a Queen who can make pumpkin cupcakes. Even so, I enjoyed meeting you.” Next he went to Terra Incognita, the kingdom to the • commas • apostrophes • dialogue south to see Queen Malicious. She was not as kind as she was beautiful, but the king asked, “Can you make cupcakes? No, she said, but my spicey curry sauce is tasty. “I like curry, but I like cupcakes more, the king said. Next, the king went to Zamboni, the kingdom to the East, to see Queen Plain Jane who was not as beautiful as she was kind. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 37 37 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: The King’s Cupcakes (cont.) FABLE WEDNESDAY Week 7 asked Before he could say a word, she ask Can you play the bassoon? I won’t marry a man who cant play the bassoon. said I cannot says the king, but I can play the xylophone. Sorry, she said. That wont do. minister Error Summary Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Comma 2 Quotation Mark 10 Spelling 7 The king went home alone. There, the prime minestir advised him to find a queen, even if she wasnt ideal. So the king went to see Queen Appelonia again, only to find that had orchard she have married the owner of an apple orchurd and opened found bakery a bakkry. He returned to Terra Incognita but finds that a dragon seized draggon had seezed Queen Malicious for her spicy sauce fiery recipe recepie, which he needed for his firey breath. THURSDAY Week 7 In the end, the king proposed to queen plain jane of agreed zamboni. She aggreed to marry him because he was such a awful good king. A year later, though, they had an awfull argument. “Why can’t you make pumpkin cupcakes? he yelled. / “Hey why can’t you play the bassoon She shouted back. didn’t Error Summary Capitalization 6 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Comma 4 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 3 Spelling 3 They did’nt speak to each other all that day. Soon however they realized that they had been foolish. Eventually, himself the king learned to make pumpkin cupcakes hisself, and the / queen learned to play the bassoon. The King then issued this statement to the people of his kingdom: “If you want something done learn to do it yourself. 38 2837.indb 38 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing FABLE: The King’s Cupcakes (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 7 Before he could say a word, she ask Can you play the bassoon? I won’t marry a man who cant play the bassoon. I cannot says the king, but I can play the xylophone. • verbs • dialogue • apostrophes Sorry, she said. That wont do. The king went home alone. There, the prime minestir advised him to find a queen, even if she wasnt ideal. So the king went to see Queen Appelonia again, only to find that she have married the owner of an apple orchurd and opened a bakkry. He returned to Terra Incognita but finds that a draggon had seezed Queen Malicious for her spicy sauce recepie, which he needed for his firey breath. THURSDAY Week 7 In the end, the king proposed to queen plain jane of zamboni. She aggreed to marry him because he was such a good king. A year later, though, they had an awfull argument. “Why can’t you make pumpkin cupcakes? he yelled. • personal names • titles of people • apostrophes • dialogue “Hey why can’t you play the bassoon She shouted back. They did’nt speak to each other all that day. Soon however they realized that they had been foolish. Eventually, the king learned to make pumpkin cupcakes hisself, and the queen learned to play the bassoon. The King then issued this statement to the people of his kingdom: “If you want something done learn to do it yourself. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 39 39 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: A Natural Home SCIENCE ARTICLE MONDAY Week 8 A Natural Home Error Summary Punctuation: Do you like frogs lizards and snakes. If so, you might enjoy having a vivarium an enclosed space for keeping organisms resembles organisims to observe. A vivarium is a setting, that ressembles Apostrophe 1 Comma 6 Period 1 Question Mark 1 Spelling 8 the natural surroundings of the organisms you put in it. By particular using rocks soil and water in partiklar ways, you can create environment an enviurnment like that of a rainforest or a desert. choose When you make a vivarium, you need to chuze plants compatible and animals that are compatable with that environment A obviously vivarium that has desert plants and rainforest animals obviosly successful wouldnt be very sucesful. TUESDAY Week 8 suited Many different kinds of animals are sooted to lizards vivariums. Frogs, snakes and lizzards are good choices. Other possibilities are possibleties is salamanders toads turtles spiders newts and insects. Of course you can include two or more different is animals. The main thing to remember are that one animal Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe Comma Period Spelling 2 10 1 5 must not think of the other animals as dinner! You should also think about what to feed the plant’s and animal’s in your vivarium. The plants might need fertilizer. / From time to time. The animals might need live food, such as crickets crickits maggots or mice. Many pet stores sell live food but separate you can also raise live food in a seperete vivarium. 40 2837.indb 40 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM SCIENCE ARTICLE: A Natural Home Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 8 A Natural Home • commas Do you like frogs lizards and snakes. If so, you might enjoy having a vivarium an enclosed space for keeping • end punctuation organisims to observe. A vivarium is a setting, that ressembles the natural surroundings of the organisms you put in it. By using rocks soil and water in partiklar ways, you can create an enviurnment like that of a rainforest or a desert. When you make a vivarium, you need to chuze plants and animals that are compatable with that environment A vivarium that has desert plants and rainforest animals obviosly wouldnt be very sucesful. TUESDAY Week 8 Many different kinds of animals are sooted to vivariums. Frogs, snakes and lizzards are good choices. Other possibleties is salamanders toads turtles spiders newts and insects. Of course you can include two or more different animals. The main thing to remember are that one animal • commas • apostrophes • verbs • incomplete sentences must not think of the other animals as dinner! You should also think about what to feed the plant’s and animal’s in your vivarium. The plants might need fertilizer. From time to time. The animals might need live food, such as crickits maggots or mice. Many pet stores sell live food but you can also raise live food in a seperete vivarium. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 41 41 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: A Natural Home (cont.) SCIENCE ARTICLE WEDNESDAY Week 8 temperature appropriate The tempature inside a vivarium must be apropriate for the plants and animals that live in it. Therefore, all of the organisms organizms should have the same requirements. For example, wouldn’t it would’nt be good to combine plants that need a warm Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Period 2 Spelling 7 environment with animals that need a cool environment. desert Lets say you want to set up a vivarium with a dessert an environment. Start with a aquarium. Add a layer of gravel and sand. Place a flat rock in the sand, i t gives the animals themselves a place to sun themselfs. Add a small branch for shade, it gives the animals a place to hide. Use a heat lamp to achieve degrees / the proper Temperature—usually 85 to 90 degrese Fahrenheit. THURSDAY Week 8 / / A vivarium can also have a Damp Forest environment, Error Summary Capitalization 6 Punctuation: salamanders and many kinds of frogs can thrive there. The Apostrophe 2 best plants for this type of vivarium are moss ivy and small Comma 3 Period 4 Spelling 5 aquarium houseplant’s. Begin with an acquarium. Line the bottom with drainage about two inches of gravel, this will provide drainege. Add three to four inches of sterilized topsoil which you can purchase layer purchus from a plant nursery. Then add a thin layar of peat moss, this will help keep moisture in the vivarium. Use a desk lamp for light and heat, dont forget to provide water. After observing the organisms every day for a few months, you will behave learn how they beehave in a natural setting. 42 2837.indb 42 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing SCIENCE Article: A Natural Home (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 8 The tempature inside a vivarium must be apropriate for the plants and animals that live in it. Therefore, all of the organizms should have the same requirements. For example, • apostrophes • run-on sentences it would’nt be good to combine plants that need a warm environment with animals that need a cool environment. Lets say you want to set up a vivarium with a dessert environment. Start with a aquarium. Add a layer of gravel and sand. Place a flat rock in the sand, it gives the animals a place to sun themselfs. Add a small branch for shade, it gives the animals a place to hide. Use a heat lamp to achieve the proper Temperature—usually 85 to 90 degrese Fahrenheit. THURSDAY Week 8 A vivarium can also have a Damp Forest environment, salamanders and many kinds of frogs can thrive there. The best plants for this type of vivarium are moss ivy and small • run-on sentences • commas houseplant’s. Begin with an acquarium. Line the bottom with about two inches of gravel, this will provide drainege. Add three to four inches of sterilized topsoil which you can purchus from a plant nursery. Then add a thin layar of peat moss, this will help keep moisture in the vivarium. Use a desk lamp for light and heat, dont forget to provide water. After observing the organisms every day for a few months, you will learn how they beehave in a natural setting. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 43 43 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Student Elections REALISTIC FICTION MONDAY Week 9 Student Elections Capitalization 2 Punctuation: Vinnie and Eddie were in the same seventh grade class. friends They had been best freinds since second grade, and they agreed on nearly everything—until that one day in november. they saw something Error Summary that Walking down the hall, a strange thing caught their attention. Some kids were vandalizing the paintings in the art display Apostrophe 2 Comma 3 Hyphen 1 Quotation Mark 2 Sentence Structure Spelling 1 2 case. One of those kids Jason Walker had been in Eddies class last year. Jason noticed that Eddie recognized him, and he stared aggressively at Eddie. As they continued down the hall, Vinnie whispered come principal on, Eddie. Lets report those guys to the principle. TUESDAY Week 9 “I cant Vinnie,” said Eddie. I know that guy, and hes Error Summary Capitalization 1 Punctuation: tough. Besides, I don’t have time. I have to go home and Apostrophe 6 work on my campain. Did you forget that Im running for Comma 5 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 2 campaign election student-body president. The ellection is next week. “I can’t believe you wont back me up on this, Eddie” Spelling 3 said Vinnie. “Sorry Vinnie. I have to get home” Eddie replied. As Eddie hurried home, Vinnie went to the principals office to report the vandalism. Later that afternoon he / happened talked with his Mother about what had happenned. She shared Vinnies disappointment in Eddie. 44 2837.indb 44 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Realistic Fiction: Student Elections Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 9 Student Elections Vinnie and Eddie were in the same seventh grade class. They had been best freinds since second grade, and they agreed on nearly everything—until that one day in november. • hyphens • dangling modifiers • apostrophes • dialogue Walking down the hall, a strange thing caught their attention. Some kids were vandalizing the paintings in the art display case. One of those kids Jason Walker had been in Eddies class last year. Jason noticed that Eddie recognized him, and he stared aggressively at Eddie. As they continued down the hall, Vinnie whispered come on, Eddie. Lets report those guys to the principle. TUESDAY Week 9 “I cant Vinnie,” said Eddie. I know that guy, and hes tough. Besides, I don’t have time. I have to go home and work on my campain. Did you forget that Im running for student-body president. The ellection is next week. • commas • apostrophes • end punctuation • dialogue “I can’t believe you wont back me up on this, Eddie” said Vinnie. “Sorry Vinnie. I have to get home” Eddie replied. As Eddie hurried home, Vinnie went to the principals office to report the vandalism. Later that afternoon he talked with his Mother about what had happenned. She shared Vinnies disappointment in Eddie. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 45 45 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Student Elections (cont.) REALISTIC FICTION WEDNESDAY Week 9 That night, vinnie had a hard time getting to sleep. He disappointed Error Summary Capitalization 2 Punctuation: kept thinking about how dissapointed he was in his friend. Apostrophe 3 He also began to wonder if Eddie would really make a good Comma 3 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 1 Until president. Untill now, Vinnie had supported his friend. Now ignore he was beginning to question things. If Eddie could ignoar Spelling 4 solid vandalism then perhaps his character wasnt so sollid. The next morning, as the two friends were walking to school, eddie announced “Ive been giving it some thought and have decided to withdraw from the election. What kind of president would I be if I couldnt even report those guys yesterday. I think you should run Vinnie. THURSDAY Week 9 Vinnie thought about his friends suggestion all day. talked That evening, he talks it over with his parents. Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: “So, have you decided to run” asked his mother. guess “I gues I have” replied Vinnie. You know, mom, I actually felt scared when I saw those guys vandalizing the shouldn’t paintings. No one knows what they might do next. I should’nt Apostrophe 2 Comma 1 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 3 Spelling 4 anybody have to feel afraid at school, and neither should nobody else. violence Students should be able to report crimes and violince at campaign school. That will be the main point of my campagn.” / said Vinnies Dad says, Great idea! I’ll help you make some posters. I think you just might win this election. 46 2837.indb 46 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing Realistic Fiction: Student Elections (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 9 That night, vinnie had a hard time getting to sleep. He kept thinking about how dissapointed he was in his friend. He also began to wonder if Eddie would really make a good president. Untill now, Vinnie had supported his friend. Now • commas • apostrophes • end punctuation • dialogue he was beginning to question things. If Eddie could ignoar vandalism then perhaps his character wasnt so sollid. The next morning, as the two friends were walking to school, eddie announced “Ive been giving it some thought and have decided to withdraw from the election. What kind of president would I be if I couldnt even report those guys yesterday. I think you should run Vinnie. THURSDAY Week 9 Vinnie thought about his friends suggestion all day. That evening, he talks it over with his parents. “So, have you decided to run” asked his mother. “I gues I have” replied Vinnie. You know, mom, I • verbs • end punctuation • double negatives • dialogue actually felt scared when I saw those guys vandalizing the paintings. No one knows what they might do next. I should’nt have to feel afraid at school, and neither should nobody else. Students should be able to report crimes and violince at school. That will be the main point of my campagn.” Vinnies Dad says, Great idea! I’ll help you make some posters. I think you just might win this election. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 47 47 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire History Article MONDAY Week 10 Error Summary The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire Capitalization March 25 1911, started out as an ordinary spring Punctuation: saturday in new york city. Five hundred workers mostly young women reported to work at the ten story building at the corner of washington place and Greene street. They headed 12 Language Usage 2 Apostrophe 1 Comma 3 Hyphen 2 Spelling 2 upstairs to the top three floors, where the triangle waist company manufactured shirtwaists, a type of womens blouse height that was the hite of fashion at the time. Tragically, 146 of would those workers wood never return home. the fire that would start just before closing time would cost them their lives. were than more then four tenths of the victims was teenagers. TUESDAY Week 10 a fire broke out on the eighth floor of the building was at about 440 in the afternoon. The eighth floor were where forty fourty workers all men cut fabric at long wooden tables. wasted Although the skilled workers waisted little fabric, they always thrown produced produiced some scraps. these scraps were throne into bins Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Colon 1 Comma 5 Hyphen 1 Spelling 6 dealer under the tables. Roughly every two-months, a rag deelar scraps sold removed about a ton of scrapes and sells them back to cotton mills that made new cloth from them. The last pickup meant had been in january which means of course that the bins beneath the wooden tables held about a ton of scraps. These were scraps was not the only flammable materials in the room. 48 2837.indb 48 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM HISTORY ARTICLE: The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 10 The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire March 25 1911, started out as an ordinary spring saturday in new york city. Five hundred workers mostly young women reported to work at the ten story building at the • place names • company names • commas • hyphens corner of washington place and Greene street. They headed upstairs to the top three floors, where the triangle waist company manufactured shirtwaists, a type of womens blouse that was the hite of fashion at the time. Tragically, 146 of those workers wood never return home. the fire that would start just before closing time would cost them their lives. more then four tenths of the victims was teenagers. TUESDAY Week 10 a fire broke out on the eighth floor of the building at about 440 in the afternoon. The eighth floor were where fourty workers all men cut fabric at long wooden tables. • commas • time • verbs Although the skilled workers waisted little fabric, they always produiced some scraps. these scraps were throne into bins under the tables. Roughly every two-months, a rag deelar removed about a ton of scrapes and sells them back to cotton mills that made new cloth from them. The last pickup had been in january which means of course that the bins beneath the wooden tables held about a ton of scraps. These scraps was not the only flammable materials in the room. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 49 49 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire (cont.) WEDNESDAY history article Week 10 On a typical workday, cutters on the eighth floor fabric spread 120 layers of sheer lightweight fabbrick on their tissue tables the layers were separated with sheets of tishue flammable was paper. The fabric like the tissue paper were as flammible as women Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Comma 5 Period 2 Spelling 7 gasoline. About a hundred woman worked on that floor Paper patterns hung from lengths of string over the tables. on the ninth sewing nineth floor, nearly 300 women were sowing garments. Stored nearby was cans of highly flammable oil used to make the smoothly / / sewing machines run smoothley. The Tenth Floor was where were finished the finnished garments was inspected packaged and shipped. THURSDAY Week 10 started began No one knows for sure what start the fire. It begin Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 8 on the eighth floor in the scraps that were stored in the Punctuation: bins. A live ash from a cigaratte may had been the cause. Hyphen 2 Period 1 cigarette have quickly In any case, the fire spread quick to the ninth floor. Because there Spelling 4 the stairway doors were locked, the women their didn’t have any no way to escape. Panicked workers crowded onto the fire collapsed weight escape, which collapses from too much wait. Others jumped from windows to the pavement ninety five feet below. Nearly all who died were women between fourteen and twenty three immigrated years old who had recently imigrated from i taly or russia. It worst seen was the worse workplace disaster the country had ever saw 50 2837.indb 50 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM HISTORY ARTICLE: The Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire (cont.) Daily Paragraph Editing Name WEDNESDAY Week 10 On a typical workday, cutters on the eighth floor spread 120 layers of sheer lightweight fabbrick on their tables the layers were separated with sheets of tishue • commas • run-on sentences paper. The fabric like the tissue paper were as flammible as gasoline. About a hundred woman worked on that floor Paper patterns hung from lengths of string over the tables. on the nineth floor, nearly 300 women were sowing garments. Stored nearby was cans of highly flammable oil used to make the sewing machines run smoothley. The Tenth Floor was where the finnished garments was inspected packaged and shipped. THURSDAY Week 10 No one knows for sure what start the fire. It begin on the eighth floor in the scraps that were stored in the bins. A live ash from a cigaratte may had been the cause. In any case, the fire spread quick to the ninth floor. Because the stairway doors were locked, the women their didn’t have • place names • verbs • adverbs • words that compare no way to escape. Panicked workers crowded onto the fire escape, which collapses from too much wait. Others jumped from windows to the pavement ninety five feet below. Nearly all who died were women between fourteen and twenty three years old who had recently imigrated from italy or russia. It was the worse workplace disaster the country had ever saw © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 51 51 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: The Snake Charmer Short Story MONDAY Week 11 The Snake Charmer Scott’s friends had come over to watch a t v program about snakes, they all knew about Scott’s intense interest creatures in the creepy creatchers and pretended to be interested, polite addition just to be pollite. Scotts most recent edition to his reptile collection was a rare python. He had named her India which Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 3 Period 1 Quotation Mark 3 Spelling 4 is where she came from. guests Scott’s geusts were dismayed when he brought i ndia into the living room. “Dont worry said Scott. Pythons are harmless really quite harmlessly. Just don’t make any sudden moves. If a python is startled it might attack. TUESDAY Week 11 curled Scott placed the python on the floor where she curld potato up into a coil. Just then Daniel dropped a potatoe chip on the quickly floor and bent over quick to pick it up. what a mistake that was. India frightened by this sudden move wrapped herself waist any around Daniels waste and didn’t show no signs of letting go. Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe Comma Exclamation Point Spelling 2 10 1 6 soothing Scotts sootheing words did not seem to calm her down. Jane strangle thought the snake might strangel Daniel; she reached for the phone called the paramedics and asked for help. Within minutes Scott’s living room was full of firefighters paramedics sheriff’s deputies and animal-control solution officers. Each one had a different solusion to the problem. 52 2837.indb 52 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Short Story: The Snake Charmer Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 11 The Snake Charmer Scott’s friends had come over to watch a tv program about snakes, they all knew about Scott’s intense interest • commas • apostrophes • dialogue in the creepy creatchers and pretended to be interested, just to be pollite. Scotts most recent edition to his reptile collection was a rare python. He had named her India which is where she came from. Scott’s geusts were dismayed when he brought india into the living room. “Dont worry said Scott. Pythons are really quite harmlessly. Just don’t make any sudden moves. If a python is startled it might attack. TUESDAY Week 11 Scott placed the python on the floor where she curld up into a coil. Just then Daniel dropped a potatoe chip on the floor and bent over quick to pick it up. what a mistake that • commas • end punctuation • adverbs was. India frightened by this sudden move wrapped herself around Daniels waste and didn’t show no signs of letting go. Scotts sootheing words did not seem to calm her down. Jane thought the snake might strangel Daniel; she reached for the phone called the paramedics and asked for help. Within minutes Scott’s living room was full of firefighters paramedics sheriff’s deputies and animal-control officers. Each one had a different solusion to the problem. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 53 53 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: The Snake Charmer (cont.) Short Story WEDNESDAY Week 11 One of the firefighter’s said I think we’ll have to cut off the snakes head.” “No way!” said Scott. She’s just scared, we can find a persuade way to persuede her to let go” Meanwhile, Daniel was fine. They tried everything—from soft music to ice packs— Error Summary Capitalization 1 Punctuation: Apostrophe 4 Comma 3 Period 2 Quotation Mark 4 Spelling 3 but nothing seemed to work. Suddenly one of the paramedics sensitive had an idea. I read that snakes are sensative to odors. I think we should try smelling salts, she suggested. Scott was willing to try any thing, as long as it didnt hurt India so the paramedic broke open an ammonia capsule and held it close to Indias head. THURSDAY Week 11 relaxed India relaxes immediately, and Scott unwound her from relief Daniels’ waist. Everyone breathed a sigh of releif as Scott enclosure took takes India back to her enclozure. When he returned to the room the sheriffs deputies and the others were just leaving. Scott thanked them for their help then he turned to his guests and said “We missed most of the show but we Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 5 Period 2 Quotation Mark 1 Spelling 4 flipped can still watch the last part” as he fliped on the TV. His guests groaned having seen enough of snakes for a while. “Snakes are very sensitive to odors they are also frightened by sudden movements, the narrator was saying. laughed quietly Scott laught quiet and turned off the TV. 54 2837.indb 54 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing Short Story: The Snake Charmer (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 11 One of the firefighter’s said I think we’ll have to cut off the snakes head.” “No way!” said Scott. She’s just scared, we can find a way to persuede her to let go” Meanwhile, Daniel was fine. • commas • apostrophes • dialogue • compound words They tried everything—from soft music to ice packs— but nothing seemed to work. Suddenly one of the paramedics had an idea. I read that snakes are sensative to odors. I think we should try smelling salts, she suggested. Scott was willing to try any thing, as long as it didnt hurt India so the paramedic broke open an ammonia capsule and held it close to Indias head. THURSDAY Week 11 India relaxes immediately, and Scott unwound her from Daniels’ waist. Everyone breathed a sigh of releif as Scott takes India back to her enclozure. When he returned to the room the sheriffs deputies and the others were just leaving. • verbs • apostrophes • commas • dialogue Scott thanked them for their help then he turned to his guests and said “We missed most of the show but we can still watch the last part” as he fliped on the TV. His guests groaned having seen enough of snakes for a while. “Snakes are very sensitive to odors they are also frightened by sudden movements, the narrator was saying. Scott laught quiet and turned off the TV. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 55 55 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: A Sea That’s Not a Sea GEOGRAPHY article MONDAY Week 12 A Sea That’s Not a Sea Capitalization / landlocked Lake is about fifteen miles East of Jerusalem. Its concentration 4 Punctuation: Despite its name, the Dead Sea is not really a sea, this / Error Summary columns minerals water has such a high consentration of minnerals that colums Comma 3 Period 1 Spelling 5 of salt form and rise above the surface; these formations, according to some people look like oddly shaped icebergs. The Normally saltiest Dead Sea is the world’s saltyest body of water. Normaly, seawater has a salt content of 3.5 percent. By contrast the water in the Dead Sea is 28 percent salt—eight times as salty as the ocean. It is even saltier than the Great Salt Lake in utah which is six times as salty as ocean water. TUESDAY Week 12 The saltiness of the water is the reason that objects float so well in the lake. According to Rupert o Matthews, who which wrote the book The atlas of natural Wonders, “ . . it is far easier to swim or float here than in any other stretch float of water.” Can you imagine how it would feel to flaot in this lake. You could even read a book as you floated along! Error Summary Capitalization 5 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Ellipses 1 Period 1 Question Mark 2 Underlined Words 5 Spelling 4 Indirectly, the dead sea gets its name from its salt content kontent. Can you guess why. The fact is, salt kills almost swept every form of life that is sweept into the Dead Sea. Very bacteria few organisms, such as certain kinds of bactirea, can live in this salty environment. 56 2837.indb 56 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM GEOGRAPHY article: A Sea That’s Not a Sea Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 12 A Sea That’s Not a Sea Despite its name, the Dead Sea is not really a sea, this landlocked Lake is about fifteen miles East of Jerusalem. Its • run-on sentences • commas • place names water has such a high consentration of minnerals that colums of salt form and rise above the surface; these formations, according to some people look like oddly shaped icebergs. The Dead Sea is the world’s saltyest body of water. Normaly, seawater has a salt content of 3.5 percent. By contrast the water in the Dead Sea is 28 percent salt—eight times as salty as the ocean. It is even saltier than the Great Salt Lake in utah which is six times as salty as ocean water. TUESDAY Week 12 The saltiness of the water is the reason that objects float so well in the lake. According to Rupert o Matthews, which wrote the book The atlas of natural Wonders, “ . . it is • pronouns • personal names • book titles far easier to swim or float here than in any other stretch • end punctuation of water.” Can you imagine how it would feel to flaot in this • ellipses lake. You could even read a book as you floated along! Indirectly, the dead sea gets its name from its salt kontent. Can you guess why. The fact is, salt kills almost every form of life that is sweept into the Dead Sea. Very few organisms, such as certain kinds of bactirea, can live in this salty environment. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 57 57 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: A Sea That’s Not a Sea (cont.) GEOGRAPHY article WEDNESDAY Week 12 extraordinary These extraordinery, single celled organisms of the has Halobacterium species thrive in warm water that have high live concentrations of salt. The bacteria lives only in places such as the Great Salt Lake and the Dead sea. These purple organisms have a special light sensitive protein that gathers Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Hyphen 2 Underlined Words 1 Spelling 6 collects sunlight sunlight—just as chlorophyll in green plants collect sunlite. They could not survive in a less saline environment. The extreme saltiness of the Dead Sea is not its distinction claims unique only yuneek feature. It also claim the distinkshun of being / the lowest body of water on the Planets surface, with an elevation sea ellavation of 1,300 feet below see level. THURSDAY Week 12 interesting Another interresting fact about the Dead Sea is, that according Error Summary Capitalization 4 Punctuation: the concentration of salt changes acording to depth. The Apostrophe 2 water is much saltier in the deepest part’s. Thats because Comma 3 Hyphen 2 Parentheses 1 denser salt water is densser than fresh water. From the surface down to a depth of 130 feet the salinity is about 300 parts Spelling 4 per thousand. (In other words, every cup of water has nearly one third cup of salt. A 200 foot-thick layer below that has thousand a salinity of about 332 parts per thousend. The water is saltiest at a depth of more than 330 feet below the surface. It is so dense that it stays on the bottom. By now you can understand why the dead sea is also called the salt sea. 58 2837.indb 58 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing GEOGRAPHY article: A Sea That’s Not a Sea (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 12 These extraordinery, single celled organisms of the Halobacterium species thrive in warm water that have high concentrations of salt. The bacteria lives only in places such • hyphens • scientific names • verbs as the Great Salt Lake and the Dead sea. These purple organisms have a special light sensitive protein that gathers sunlight—just as chlorophyll in green plants collect sunlite. They could not survive in a less saline environment. The extreme saltiness of the Dead Sea is not its only yuneek feature. It also claim the distinkshun of being the lowest body of water on the Planets surface, with an ellavation of 1,300 feet below see level. THURSDAY Week 12 Another interresting fact about the Dead Sea is, that the concentration of salt changes acording to depth. The water is much saltier in the deepest part’s. Thats because • parentheses • hyphens • place names salt water is densser than fresh water. From the surface down to a depth of 130 feet the salinity is about 300 parts per thousand. (In other words, every cup of water has nearly one third cup of salt. A 200 foot-thick layer below that has a salinity of about 332 parts per thousend. The water is saltiest at a depth of more than 330 feet below the surface. It is so dense that it stays on the bottom. By now you can understand why the dead sea is also called the salt sea. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 59 59 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Georges Méliès, Film Pioneer TECHNOLOGy Article MONDAY Week 13 Georges Méliès, Film Pioneer One of the characters in the film Hugo is based on a real life person named Georges Méliès (mehl-yes). This 2011 portrays an movie portray him as a old man. Who was Méliès and how magician did he become a film pioneer. georges méliès was a majishun who began working with film in the late 1890s. At that time, technology infancy Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Comma 2 Hyphen 2 Period 1 Question Mark 1 Underlined Words 1 Spelling 6 film teknology was in its infintsy. Méliès studied the new techniques pioneers tekneeks being used by other film pionnears, including Louis brought and Auguste Lumière whose inventions brung moving pictures to audiences, for the first time. Méliès ordered custom made equipment / projectors and processing equiptmint. And started to work. TUESDAY Week 13 With his new equipment, Méliès began to make short started magic Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 2 simple films. Soon however he start to film the majik acts Punctuation: that was being performed at the theater he ownd in paris Comma were owned france. By 1896, he was producing his first “trick” films effects Spelling 6 8 certain using special uffecks and multiple exposures to create sertin illusions. In his films, people and objects often seemed physically vanished to transform fissikly, or they appeared and then vannisht quite mysteriously. The effects were quiet entertaining. He also experimented with editing techniques that allowed him to imaginative make longer more complex moving pictures. The imajinative movies that Méliès made, influenced the future of filmmaking. 60 2837.indb 60 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM TECHNOLOGY Article: Georges Méliès, Film Pioneer Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 13 Georges Méliès, Film Pioneer One of the characters in the film Hugo is based on a real life person named Georges Méliès (mehl-yes). This 2011 • hyphens • movie titles • end punctuation movie portray him as a old man. Who was Méliès and how did he become a film pioneer. georges méliès was a majishun who began working with film in the late 1890s. At that time, film teknology was in its infintsy. Méliès studied the new tekneeks being used by other film pionnears, including Louis and Auguste Lumière whose inventions brung moving pictures to audiences, for the first time. Méliès ordered custom made projectors and processing equiptmint. And started to work. TUESDAY Week 13 With his new equipment, Méliès began to make short simple films. Soon however he start to film the majik acts that was being performed at the theater he ownd in paris • commas • verbs • place names france. By 1896, he was producing his first “trick” films using special uffecks and multiple exposures to create sertin illusions. In his films, people and objects often seemed to transform fissikly, or they appeared and then vannisht mysteriously. The effects were quiet entertaining. He also experimented with editing techniques that allowed him to make longer more complex moving pictures. The imajinative movies that Méliès made, influenced the future of filmmaking. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 61 61 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Georges Méliès, Film Pioneer (cont.) TECHNOLOGy Article WEDNESDAY Week 13 Other filmmakers were making single shot films but numerous Error Summary Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Méliès linked nummerus shots together. In 1899, he released Comma 3 the seven minute film Cinderella which told the familiar ferry Hyphen 3 fairy released tale in 20 scenes. His best known film was relleased in 1902. Underlined Words 18 Spelling 5 Titled A Trip to the Moon it was loosely based on two books that were popular at the time. Those books were From the Earth to the Moon by Jules Verne and The First Men in the projected Moon by H. G. Wells. The film ran 14 minutes when perjected at 16 frames per second, the usual speed at the time. Today, typically movies are typical projected at 24 to 30 frames per second, less choppy so the motion is smoother and least chopy. THURSDAY Week 13 fiction A Trip to the Moon was the first science fictian film Error Summary Language Usage 1 Punctuation: ever made and it was very successful One scene in particular Comma 4 became famous. It shows a spaceship landing in the eye of Period 3 Quotation Mark 2 the proverbial “man in the moon. Even though many people profit around the world saw the film Méliès did not prophit much Underlined Words 5 Spelling 5 copies from its success Other people made copys of the film and kept keeped the profits for themselves remembered Méliès is remmembered today as one of the first to photography use multiple exposures, time-lapse fotografy and hand-painted color. Because of the sense of magic in his films Méliès is sometimes called a “cinemagician”. 62 2837.indb 62 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing TECHNOLOGY ARTICLE: Georges Méliès, Film Pioneer (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 13 Other filmmakers were making single shot films but Méliès linked nummerus shots together. In 1899, he released the seven minute film Cinderella which told the familiar ferry tale in 20 scenes. His best known film was relleased in 1902. • commas • hyphens • movie titles • book titles Titled A Trip to the Moon it was loosely based on two books that were popular at the time. Those books were From the Earth to the Moon by Jules Verne and The First Men in the Moon by H. G. Wells. The film ran 14 minutes when perjected at 16 frames per second, the usual speed at the time. Today, movies are typical projected at 24 to 30 frames per second, so the motion is smoother and least chopy. THURSDAY Week 13 A Trip to the Moon was the first science fictian film ever made and it was very successful One scene in particular • commas became famous. It shows a spaceship landing in the eye of • special phrases in quotation marks the proverbial “man in the moon. Even though many people • punctuation with quotation marks around the world saw the film Méliès did not prophit much from its success Other people made copys of the film and keeped the profits for themselves Méliès is remmembered today as one of the first to use multiple exposures, time-lapse fotografy and hand-painted color. Because of the sense of magic in his films Méliès is sometimes called a “cinemagician”. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 63 63 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Diary of a Science Genius JOURNAL ENTRY MONDAY Week 14 Diary of a Science Genius Error Summary Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Monday January 15 I’ve got to decide on a project for the science fair this year . . and fast! For my project last year I made glue materials from milk The only mattereals I used were skim milk vinegar Comma 6 Ellipses 1 Period 1 Quotation Mark 2 Spelling 6 vinegar water and baking soda. I first heated the vinagur and milk. leaving The milk curdled, making something called “curds” and leeving liquid dried a likwid called whey. Then I mixed the dryed curds with the mixture water and baking soda. The mixchur formed glue. It really worked! This year I want to do something even more exciting anything than then that but I haven’t thought of nothing yet. TUESDAY Week 14 Capitalization tuesday, january 16 great prove Error Summary fair I have a grate idea for the science fare! Im going to proov that I can walk on top of a liquid with out sinking. I’ll need water cornstarch and some large plastic tubs. I think I should use three tubs and line them up. Twelve boxes of 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 5 Comma 2 Exclamation Point 1 Period 2 Spelling 8 enough corn starch should be enuff. The first thing I’ll do is put cornstarch in the plastic tubs then I’ll pour in some water. supposed I’m sposed to add the water a little at a time, then Ill mix the stuff until its like thick pancake batter. If theres some in each tub, I can walk from one to the other. I’ll test it tomorrow out tommorrow. I bet itll be messy 64 2837.indb 64 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM JOURNAL ENTRY: Diary of a Science Genius Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 14 Diary of a Science Genius • commas Monday January 15 I’ve got to decide on a project for the science fair this year . . and fast! For my project last year I made glue • ellipses • special words in quotation marks from milk The only mattereals I used were skim milk vinegar water and baking soda. I first heated the vinagur and milk. The milk curdled, making something called “curds” and leeving a likwid called whey. Then I mixed the dryed curds with the water and baking soda. The mixchur formed glue. It really worked! This year I want to do something even more exciting then that but I haven’t thought of nothing yet. TUESDAY Week 14 tuesday, january 16 I have a grate idea for the science fare! Im going to proov that I can walk on top of a liquid with out sinking. I’ll • commas • apostrophes • end punctuation need water cornstarch and some large plastic tubs. I think I should use three tubs and line them up. Twelve boxes of corn starch should be enuff. The first thing I’ll do is put cornstarch in the plastic tubs then I’ll pour in some water. I’m sposed to add the water a little at a time, then Ill mix the stuff until its like thick pancake batter. If theres some in each tub, I can walk from one to the other. I’ll test it out tommorrow. I bet itll be messy © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 65 65 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Diary of a Science Genius (cont.) JOURNAL ENTRY WEDNESDAY Week 14 Wednesday Wedensday, January 17 tried Error Summary Capitalization 2 Punctuation: experiment Well I tryed the ikspirimant, i t didnt work. Then I mistake reread the directions. The misteak I made was not stomping hard enough on the mixture. What I need to do is stomp harden down very hard this will make the goo hardin immediately. Apostrophe 2 Comma 3 Period 2 Question Mark 1 Spelling 10 That way, my feet wont sink. How does it work. Cornstarch substances dissolve unlike many other substanses does not disolve in water. A impact absorbed hard impack causes more water to become apsorbed by the microscopic grains of cornstarch. I have to be careful, though. If the impact is too great, it will actually crack the tomorrow hard mixture. I’ll try it again tommorow. THURSDAY Week 14 January Capitalization Thursday Jannuary 18 1 Punctuation: The first thing I did after school today was, go to the store, and buy more cornstarch. Yikes. This project is getting expensive Error Summary determined expensif. I was determinned to make the experiment work finally Apostrophe 2 Comma 6 Exclamation Point 2 Spelling 6 and I was finnaly successful. I mixed the cornstarch and water in the three tubs again. Then stomping hard enough cause moment to cawse the mixture to harden for a momment I walked from one tub to the other. Hooray. My feet didnt sink! This experiment is so impressive that I’ll probably win first prize at the science fair. the next thing on my agenda: getting this weeks math homework done. 66 2837.indb 66 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing JOURNAL ENTRY: Diary of a Science Genius (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 14 Wedensday, January 17 Well I tryed the ikspirimant, it didnt work. Then I reread the directions. The misteak I made was not stomping • commas • run-on sentences • apostrophes hard enough on the mixture. What I need to do is stomp down very hard this will make the goo hardin immediately. That way, my feet wont sink. How does it work. Cornstarch unlike many other substanses does not disolve in water. A hard impack causes more water to become apsorbed by the microscopic grains of cornstarch. I have to be careful, though. If the impact is too great, it will actually crack the hard mixture. I’ll try it again tommorow. THURSDAY Week 14 Thursday Jannuary 18 The first thing I did after school today was, go to the store, and buy more cornstarch. Yikes. This project is getting • commas • end punctuation • apostrophes expensif. I was determinned to make the experiment work and I was finnaly successful. I mixed the cornstarch and water in the three tubs again. Then stomping hard enough to cawse the mixture to harden for a momment I walked from one tub to the other. Hooray. My feet didnt sink! This experiment is so impressive that I’ll probably win first prize at the science fair. the next thing on my agenda: getting this weeks math homework done. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 67 67 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Shipwreck! History Article MONDAY Week 15 Shipwreck! luxury The Titanic wasnt the only luxery ship that sank in the atlantic ocean. In the summer of 1956 the Andrea Doria joined the Titanic on the ocean floor. Like the Titanic, the Andrea Doria was a grand ship. It was 212 meters (697 ft) passengers long and could hold about 1,240 pasengers and 560 crew swimming Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 6 Period 1 Question Mark 1 Underlined Words 4 Spelling 6 members. It had three out door swiming pools, and many valuable were beautiful valuble works of art. Most important however was safety have the many safty features that should of kept the ship afloat. These features included radar which was a relatively new invention in the 1950s. So, what caused the ship to sink. TUESDAY Week 15 On july 17 1956, the Andrea Doria left genoa Italy, and was headed for new york. The voyage was supposed to take took nine days. There were 1,706 people aboard, including passengers and crew. On July 25, just before 1100 PM, the ship was south of nantucket i sland. It’s radar detected approaching another ship approching from 17 nautical miles away. The ship Error Summary Capitalization 7 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Colon 1 Comma 3 Period 2 Underlined Words 5 Spelling 3 was the Stockholm, a swedish passenger liner. The Stockholm also noticed the Andrea Doria on its radar. With so much have ocean between them, it would seem that the crew could of adjustments avoided an accident. Each ship made adjustmunts to widen the distance passing distanse but each misjudged the others course. 68 2837.indb 68 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing history article: Shipwreck! Name MONDAY Week 15 Shipwreck! The Titanic wasnt the only luxery ship that sank in the atlantic ocean. In the summer of 1956 the Andrea Doria • names of ships • place names • abbreviations joined the Titanic on the ocean floor. Like the Titanic, the Andrea Doria was a grand ship. It was 212 meters (697 ft) long and could hold about 1,240 pasengers and 560 crew members. It had three out door swiming pools, and many beautiful valuble works of art. Most important however was the many safty features that should of kept the ship afloat. These features included radar which was a relatively new invention in the 1950s. So, what caused the ship to sink. TUESDAY Week 15 On july 17 1956, the Andrea Doria left genoa Italy, and was headed for new york. The voyage was supposed to took nine days. There were 1,706 people aboard, including passengers and crew. On July 25, just before 1100 PM, • dates • names of ships • place names • time the ship was south of nantucket island. It’s radar detected another ship approching from 17 nautical miles away. The ship was the Stockholm, a swedish passenger liner. The Stockholm also noticed the Andrea Doria on its radar. With so much ocean between them, it would seem that the crew could of avoided an accident. Each ship made adjustmunts to widen the passing distanse but each misjudged the others course. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 69 69 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Shipwreck! (cont.) history article WEDNESDAY Week 15 heavy The Andrea Doria was traveling in a hevy fog that the Neither Stockholm would soon encounter. Niether could see the other and crew members made mistakes reading the radar. The swedish ship decided to pass on the port (left) side, and the i talian ship chose to pass on the starboard right side. When they got within two nautical miles of each other it became directly Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Colon 1 Comma 2 Parentheses 2 Period 2 Underlined Words 3 Spelling 4 clear that they were heading direct toward each other. At impossible the speed they were traveling, it was imposible for them to avoid a crash. At about 1110 PM, the Stockholm crashed into the starboard side of the Italian ship, cutting open seven of eleven its elevan decks. It was a fatal blow. THURSDAY Week 15 The Stockholm was still sea worthy. This wasnt true of wasn’t the Andrea Doria however. The loss of life weren’t as bad accident have as it coulda been. The axident left 51 people dead, most of them from the Andrea Doria. Nearby ships came to help, and the Stockholm provided extra life boats. By 530 the next had morning, the last lifeboat have left the andrea doria. At sunk Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 5 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Colon 2 Comma 3 Period 3 Underlined Words 6 Spelling 6 1009 AM, she had sank below the surface. The ship is now 76 meters (250 ft) below the ocean surface and is a popular owing deep-sea diving site. Its also a dangerous site, oweing to hazards currents strong curents sharks and other hazzerds. For this reason, called it has often been call the “mount everest” of scuba diving. 70 2837.indb 70 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing history article: Shipwreck! (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 15 The Andrea Doria was traveling in a hevy fog that the Stockholm would soon encounter. Niether could see the other and crew members made mistakes reading the radar. The swedish ship decided to pass on the port (left) side, and the • nationalities • time • parentheses • adverbs italian ship chose to pass on the starboard right side. When they got within two nautical miles of each other it became clear that they were heading direct toward each other. At the speed they were traveling, it was imposible for them to avoid a crash. At about 1110 PM, the Stockholm crashed into the starboard side of the Italian ship, cutting open seven of its elevan decks. It was a fatal blow. THURSDAY Week 15 The Stockholm was still sea worthy. This wasnt true of the Andrea Doria however. The loss of life weren’t as bad as it coulda been. The axident left 51 people dead, most of • verbs • compound words • place names them from the Andrea Doria. Nearby ships came to help, and the Stockholm provided extra life boats. By 530 the next morning, the last lifeboat have left the andrea doria. At 1009 AM, she had sank below the surface. The ship is now 76 meters (250 ft) below the ocean surface and is a popular deep-sea diving site. Its also a dangerous site, oweing to strong curents sharks and other hazzerds. For this reason, it has often been call the “mount everest” of scuba diving. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 71 71 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: The Amazing Spider Science article MONDAY Week 16 The Amazing Spider Have you ever wondered how a creature as small as spider an intricate answer a spidder is able to weave a intriccate web. The anser might be that spiders have huge brains! Thats what some concluding scientists are conclude. Biologists at universities in Costa Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 2 Question Mark 1 Spelling 7 rica and Panama have studied tropical spiders of all sizes. shown Their research has shone that smaller spiders have bigger their brains relative to they’re body size. In some species, the central brain sentrel nervous system which includes the brane fills nearly 80 percent of the spiders body. In some spiders, the central spills nervous system even spill into their legs! TUESDAY Week 16 would why wood scientists study spider brains? Well, scientists curious Error Summary Capitalization 3 Punctuation: are curius people in general, these biologists were mostly Apostrophe 5 wandering how spider’s formed webs. In their study, they Period 2 wondering compared first compaired the webs spun by big spiders with those Spelling 9 spun by little spiders. They noticed that the one’s spun by puny spiders were just as intricate as those spun by giant speculated appears spiders. They speckuladed that web-spinning, which apears to be a complex behavior, requires considerable brain activity. confirm The results of the scientists study seem to confurm this, the proportion fact that small spiders brain’s are bigger in perporshun to suggests their body sizes sugests that web-spinning takes brain power. 72 2837.indb 72 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM science article: The Amazing Spider Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 16 The Amazing Spider Have you ever wondered how a creature as small as a spidder is able to weave a intriccate web. The anser • articles • apostrophes • verbs might be that spiders have huge brains! Thats what some scientists are conclude. Biologists at universities in Costa rica and Panama have studied tropical spiders of all sizes. Their research has shone that smaller spiders have bigger brains relative to they’re body size. In some species, the sentrel nervous system which includes the brane fills nearly 80 percent of the spiders body. In some spiders, the central nervous system even spill into their legs! TUESDAY Week 16 why wood scientists study spider brains? Well, scientists are curius people in general, these biologists were mostly wandering how spider’s formed webs. In their study, they • apostrophes • run-on sentences first compaired the webs spun by big spiders with those spun by little spiders. They noticed that the one’s spun by puny spiders were just as intricate as those spun by giant spiders. They speckuladed that web-spinning, which apears to be a complex behavior, requires considerable brain activity. The results of the scientists study seem to confurm this, the fact that small spiders brain’s are bigger in perporshun to their body sizes sugests that web-spinning takes brain power. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 73 73 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: The Amazing Spider (cont.) Science Article WEDNESDAY Week 16 are Spiders is also amazing because of their legs. One difference is differance between spiders and insects are that spiders than have eight legs rather then six legs. However a group of recently researchers in France concluded rescently that spiders may Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Comma 3 Period 1 Spelling 5 have more legs than they really need. These scientists collected colected thousands of spiders in the wild and they noticed least that more than 10 percent had lost at lest one leg. They wondered if the missing legs were a disadvantage so they an conducted a experiment. They placed 60 intact spiders in separate seperate boxes and placed 63 spiders missing one or more legs in another set of boxes, the results were surprising. THURSDAY Week 16 The spiders missing one leg made webs that were not different built Error Summary Language Usage 2 Punctuation: much diferent from the webs bilt by intact spiders. The Comma 1 same was true of spiders missing two legs. Morover, all of Hyphen 1 Moreover were the spiders was equally able to catch and eat insects. This Spelling 9 led finding lead the scientists to conclude that spiders have more legs than they need. However the scientists also found that there limit their was a limmit to the number of legs a spider could lose loose. The team found very few five legged spiders in the easily wild. This suggests that spiders cannot survive easy if they laboratory lose too many legs. In the labratory, spiders with five legs faulty were able to build webs, but the webs were fawlty. 74 2837.indb 74 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing Science Article: The Amazing Spider (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 16 Spiders is also amazing because of their legs. One differance between spiders and insects are that spiders have eight legs rather then six legs. However a group of • commas • verbs • run-on sentences researchers in France concluded rescently that spiders may have more legs than they really need. These scientists colected thousands of spiders in the wild and they noticed that more than 10 percent had lost at lest one leg. They wondered if the missing legs were a disadvantage so they conducted a experiment. They placed 60 intact spiders in seperate boxes and placed 63 spiders missing one or more legs in another set of boxes, the results were surprising. THURSDAY Week 16 The spiders missing one leg made webs that were not much diferent from the webs bilt by intact spiders. The same was true of spiders missing two legs. Morover, all of • verbs • hyphens the spiders was equally able to catch and eat insects. This finding lead the scientists to conclude that spiders have more legs than they need. However the scientists also found that their was a limmit to the number of legs a spider could loose. The team found very few five legged spiders in the wild. This suggests that spiders cannot survive easy if they lose too many legs. In the labratory, spiders with five legs were able to build webs, but the webs were fawlty. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 75 75 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: The French Spider-Man BIOGRAPHY MONDAY Week 17 The French Spider-Man Error Summary Capitalization 2 Punctuation: Alain Robert (roh-BAYR) was born on august 7 1962 in a small town in Bourgogne France. Famous for climbing skyscrapers, he is known as the “french Spider-Man”, named hero Apostrophe 3 Comma 4 Quotation Mark 1 Spelling 6 for the comic book heroe. As a boy, Robert used to scale cliffs the rock clifs near his home. Thats how his interest in climbing began. He scaled his first building when he was just forgotten 12 years old. On that day, he had forgoten his keys and was apartment locked out of his parents appartment on the eighth floor. decided Instead of waiting for his folk’s to get home he desided to building climb the outside wall of the bilding and let himself in. TUESDAY Week 17 Climbing is my passion, my philosophy of life, Robert Error Summary Capitalization 2 Punctuation: says. Robert’s passion became apparent in 1982. He had Comma 2 two accidents that year. The first one was in january the Parentheses 1 Period 1 Quotation Mark 2 Semicolon 1 second one was in september. Both times he fell 15 meters fracturing (49 ft and was badly hurt. Besides frackshuring bones, suffered he also sufferred brain injuries that resulted in vertigo a Spelling 4 Doctors condition that causes him to feel dizzy. Docters declared him disabled and told him to give up his passion but he was climbing again within six months. Since then, he has climbed structures increasingly more challenging struktures, including more than 70 skyscrapers around the world. 76 2837.indb 76 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM BIOGRAPHY: The French Spider-Man Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 17 The French Spider-Man Alain Robert (roh-BAYR) was born on august 7 1962 in a small town in Bourgogne France. Famous for climbing skyscrapers, he is known as the “french Spider-Man”, named for the comic book heroe. As a boy, Robert used to scale • dates • nationalities • punctuation with quotation marks • apostrophes the rock clifs near his home. Thats how his interest in climbing began. He scaled his first building when he was just 12 years old. On that day, he had forgoten his keys and was locked out of his parents appartment on the eighth floor. Instead of waiting for his folk’s to get home he desided to climb the outside wall of the bilding and let himself in. TUESDAY Week 17 Climbing is my passion, my philosophy of life, Robert says. Robert’s passion became apparent in 1982. He had two accidents that year. The first one was in january the second one was in september. Both times he fell 15 meters • quotation marks • semicolons • abbreviations • parentheses (49 ft and was badly hurt. Besides frackshuring bones, he also sufferred brain injuries that resulted in vertigo a condition that causes him to feel dizzy. Docters declared him disabled and told him to give up his passion but he was climbing again within six months. Since then, he has climbed increasingly more challenging struktures, including more than 70 skyscrapers around the world. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 77 77 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: The French Spider-Man (cont.) BIOGRAPHY WEDNESDAY Week 17 skyscrapers People need permits to climb skyscrappers. Its permission such a dangerous activity that permision is often denied. strategy is Roberts strattegy are simply to arrive at dawn, ready to climb, before anyone can stop him. As he climbs crowds of illegal onlookers gather. The activity is illeagle, and Robert has been arrested Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 4 Comma 2 Semicolon 1 Spelling 7 enforcement officials arested many times. Law inforcemunt offishals often wait for him to finish climbing, sometimes they stop him earlier. Thats what happened in 1997 at the petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur, malaysia. At the time the towers were the worlds tallest most tall buildings. Malaysian authorities arrested Robert on the 60th floor, 28 floors from the top. THURSDAY Week 17 In 1999, Robert faced the most dangerous climbing conditions career Error Summary Capitalization 3 Punctuation: conditons of his carreer. He was on the 108 story Sears Comma 5 Tower now called willis tower in Chicago. When he was 20 Period 1 Hyphen 1 floors from the top a thick fog rolled in, and covered the Spelling 6 glass-and-metal wall with moisture It was so slippery that Robert was in serious danger. fortunately, he was able to difficulties overcome these dificculties and reach the top. This dangerous incident insident did not stop him, though. Robert continues with his adventures as an extreme climber. Because he usually uses amaze only his bare hands and special shoes his exploits ammaze every one who watches him. 78 2837.indb 78 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing BIOGRAPHY: The French Spider-Man (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 17 People need permits to climb skyscrappers. Its such a dangerous activity that permision is often denied. Roberts strattegy are simply to arrive at dawn, ready to climb, before anyone can stop him. As he climbs crowds of • commas • apostrophes • names of buildings • semicolons onlookers gather. The activity is illeagle, and Robert has been arested many times. Law inforcemunt offishals often wait for him to finish climbing, sometimes they stop him earlier. Thats what happened in 1997 at the petronas Twin Towers in Kuala Lumpur, malaysia. At the time the towers were the worlds most tall buildings. Malaysian authorities arrested Robert on the 60th floor, 28 floors from the top. THURSDAY Week 17 In 1999, Robert faced the most dangerous climbing conditons of his carreer. He was on the 108 story Sears Tower now called willis tower in Chicago. When he was 20 • hyphens • names of buildings • commas floors from the top a thick fog rolled in, and covered the glass-and-metal wall with moisture It was so slippery that Robert was in serious danger. fortunately, he was able to overcome these dificculties and reach the top. This dangerous insident did not stop him, though. Robert continues with his adventures as an extreme climber. Because he usually uses only his bare hands and special shoes his exploits ammaze every one who watches him. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 79 79 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Champions of Equality HISTORY ARTICLE MONDAY Week 18 Champions of Equality a The right to vote is an fundamental right that many granted people take for granite, these people have forgotten—or / Error Summary Capitalization 6 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Comma 1 Period 2 never knew about—the struggle in this Country to secure Sentence Structure 1 voteing rights for all. One of the leaders in the fight for Spelling 5 voting / / women’s Right to Vote was Susan B Anthony. She was one of the first americans to stand up for women’s rights. Born into she learned a quaker family in 1820, her family taught her that the law guarantee should guarentee equal rights for all men and women. After nineteen she became a schoolteacher at age ninteen she taught her values students these same valyooz. TUESDAY Week 18 larger audience Eventually however she wanted a more large audiense. tried Error Summary Capitalization 7 Language Usage 4 She tryed to speak at political rallies but she soon found out Punctuation: that only men was permitted to address the crowds. In 1851, Comma 4 Quotation Mark 1 were champion she met elizabeth cady stanton, another champeun of women’s friends Spelling 7 rights. They soon became close freinds and started working goals already written together toward the same goles. Stanton had all ready wrote equality an important document promoting the cause of ekwality. She based her document on the declaration of i ndependence, changing one line to read, “All men and women are created women equal”. When the civil war began in 1861 both woman joined in the fight against slavery. 80 2837.indb 80 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM HISTORY ARTICLE: Champions of Equality Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 18 Champions of Equality The right to vote is an fundamental right that many people take for granite, these people have forgotten—or never knew about—the struggle in this Country to secure voteing rights for all. One of the leaders in the fight for • abbreviations • nationalities • names of religious groups • dangling modifiers women’s Right to Vote was Susan B Anthony. She was one of the first americans to stand up for women’s rights. Born into a quaker family in 1820, her family taught her that the law should guarentee equal rights for all men and women. After she became a schoolteacher at age ninteen she taught her students these same valyooz. TUESDAY Week 18 Eventually however she wanted a more large audiense. She tryed to speak at political rallies but she soon found out that only men was permitted to address the crowds. In 1851, she met elizabeth cady stanton, another champeun of women’s rights. They soon became close freinds and started working together toward the same goles. Stanton had all ready wrote • words that compare • historical documents • historic events • punctuation with quotation marks an important document promoting the cause of ekwality. She based her document on the declaration of independence, changing one line to read, “All men and women are created equal”. When the civil war began in 1861 both woman joined in the fight against slavery. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 81 81 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Champions of Equality (cont.) HISTORY ARTICLE WEDNESDAY Week 18 Both women knew the words of The Star-Spangled popular troubled Error Summary Capitalization 3 Punctuation: Banner a poppular song at the time. Anthony was trubbled by Apostrophe 1 one phrase in the song: “the land of the free”. for a country Comma 7 Quotation Mark 3 lie that allowed slavery these words seemed like a lye. Anthony Spelling 6 and Stanton both supported the antislavery movement. when the war ended in 1865 though they broke away from it. They disappointed were disapointed because other members of the movement interest showed little interust in womens’ right to vote. Those people supported the Fifteenth Amendment to the constitution which secured voting rights for African American men. Women right however were still denied the write to vote. THURSDAY Week 18 an anthony and stanton began working toward a amendment women Error Summary Capitalization 5 Language Usage 5 that would grant voting rights to woman. From 1868 to 1870, Punctuation: Anthony pubblished a weakly maggazeen supporting the cause. Comma weekly magazine published did In 1872, Anthony done something that brought her national Spelling 1 7 / attention: She voted in the Presidential election in Rochester, new york. Since this was against the law she was arrested trial emotional and brought to trail. In an emotionol speech, she defended was herself. She said that acting against an unfair law were admirable brave and admireable. Sadly, Anthony did not see the results of her work. She died in 1906, fourteen years before the Nineteenth was Ninteenth Amendment were passed. 82 2837.indb 82 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing HISTORY ARTICLE: Champions of Equality (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 18 Both women knew the words of The Star-Spangled Banner a poppular song at the time. Anthony was trubbled by one phrase in the song: “the land of the free”. for a country that allowed slavery these words seemed like a lye. Anthony • song titles • historical documents • punctuation with quotation marks and Stanton both supported the antislavery movement. when the war ended in 1865 though they broke away from it. They were disapointed because other members of the movement showed little interust in womens’ right to vote. Those people supported the Fifteenth Amendment to the constitution which secured voting rights for African American men. Women however were still denied the write to vote. THURSDAY Week 18 anthony and stanton began working toward a amendment that would grant voting rights to woman. From 1868 to 1870, Anthony pubblished a weakly maggazeen supporting the cause. • place names • verbs In 1872, Anthony done something that brought her national attention: She voted in the Presidential election in Rochester, new york. Since this was against the law she was arrested and brought to trail. In an emotionol speech, she defended herself. She said that acting against an unfair law were brave and admireable. Sadly, Anthony did not see the results of her work. She died in 1906, fourteen years before the Ninteenth Amendment were passed. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 83 83 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Four Days Without a Cellphone anecdote MONDAY Week 19 Four Days Without a Cellphone reached I arrived at school on monday morning, and reach into my pocket for my cellphone. I wanted to text a friend but couldnt locate my phone. I didnt panic at first. I reached then into another pocket, then my back pack, and than my locker. precious Then I panicked I had lost my preshuss phone and felt thoroughly Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 2 Parentheses 1 Period 2 Question Mark 2 Spelling 6 throughly cut off from the world, (although there were people all around me.) How could I function without my entertainment phone! I used it for everything: innertanement, connecting friends assignments with freinds, and getting school assinements. My phone was practically an extension of my brain how did this happen. TUESDAY Week 19 Wednesday By Wenesday, the loss of my phone had made my life challenging / chalenging. First, I forgot my p.e. clothes. Because I didn’t get / gets the Voice memo that always reminded me to bring them week to school each weak. I couldnt text mom to bring them so I had to wait to use the school office phone after class. Error Summary Capitalization 5 Language Usage 5 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Comma 4 Period 3 Spelling 4 Worst Then Than I was late to PE. class. Worse of all, my friends went out for ice cream after school. They had invited me but too it was two late when I found out because, I didn’t get the message. I wondered why my friend’s made plans only through text messaging, and not in person? Its probably I used because my friends and me are use to texting each other. 84 2837.indb 84 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Anecdote: Four Days Without a Cellphone Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 19 Four Days Without a Cellphone I arrived at school on monday morning, and reach into my pocket for my cellphone. I wanted to text a friend but • parentheses • run-on sentences • end punctuation couldnt locate my phone. I didnt panic at first. I reached into another pocket, then my back pack, and than my locker. Then I panicked I had lost my preshuss phone and felt throughly cut off from the world, (although there were people all around me.) How could I function without my phone! I used it for everything: innertanement, connecting with freinds, and getting school assinements. My phone was practically an extension of my brain how did this happen. TUESDAY Week 19 By Wenesday, the loss of my phone had made my life chalenging. First, I forgot my p.e. clothes. Because I didn’t gets the Voice memo that always reminded me to bring them to school each weak. I couldnt text mom to bring them so I had to wait to use the school office phone after class. • abbreviations • incomplete sentences • pronouns • words that compare Than I was late to PE. class. Worse of all, my friends went out for ice cream after school. They had invited me but it was two late when I found out because, I didn’t get the message. I wondered why my friend’s made plans only through text messaging, and not in person? Its probably because my friends and me are use to texting each other. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 85 85 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Four Days Without a Cellphone (cont.) anecdote WEDNESDAY Week 19 / My Mom kept saying that my phone would turn up but find I knew that I needed to found a solution mean while. So on thursday, I distributed my home phone number to my friends. groaned Some of them groan about the inconvenience of having to than call rather then text but I pointed out that it was my only Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 6 Period 1 Spelling 4 wouldn’t option. Anyway part of me genuinely thought it would’nt be so conversations bad, to have real convirsashuns with them for a change. That / night, I waited by the home phone for hours. But it didnt never even ring once. I was so bored Usually when Im stuck some where and need to pass the time, I play games on my cellphone. Mom told me to clean my room. Yeah right. THURSDAY Week 19 an briefly When I left the room brief, I thought I heard a unfamiliar an Error Summary Language Usage 7 Punctuation: unfimiliar sound, like the ringing of a alarm clock. My mom Comma 3 called to me from the other room and told me that “a friend Exclamation Point 1 Hyphen 1 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 2 inquired had called.” When I inkwired further she said she didn’t get a name, or a phone number. I realized that even if she had gotten any memorized they’re got the name, I didn’t have no numbers memerized; their Spelling 6 Disappointed all programmed into my phone. Disipointid, I ran up to my stretched bedroom (which was still messy) closed the door, streched out suddenly on my bed, and stared at the floor. Lying there, I sudden noticed my phone sticking–out from under the bed. Yay. Now, leave where did I left my phone charger. 86 2837.indb 86 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Anecdote: Four Days Without a Cellphone (cont.) Daily Paragraph Editing Name WEDNESDAY Week 19 My Mom kept saying that my phone would turn up but I knew that I needed to found a solution mean while. So on thursday, I distributed my home phone number to my friends. • commas • double negatives • compound words Some of them groan about the inconvenience of having to call rather then text but I pointed out that it was my only option. Anyway part of me genuinely thought it would’nt be so bad, to have real convirsashuns with them for a change. That night, I waited by the home phone for hours. But it didnt never even ring once. I was so bored Usually when Im stuck some where and need to pass the time, I play games on my cellphone. Mom told me to clean my room. Yeah right. THURSDAY Week 19 When I left the room brief, I thought I heard a unfimiliar sound, like the ringing of a alarm clock. My mom called to me from the other room and told me that “a friend • adverbs • hyphens • end punctuation had called.” When I inkwired further she said she didn’t get a name, or a phone number. I realized that even if she had got the name, I didn’t have no numbers memerized; their all programmed into my phone. Disipointid, I ran up to my bedroom (which was still messy) closed the door, streched out on my bed, and stared at the floor. Lying there, I sudden noticed my phone sticking–out from under the bed. Yay. Now, where did I left my phone charger. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 87 87 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Pink Flamingos science article MONDAY Week 20 Pink Flamingos appearance These wading birds have a distinctive apearince, with plumage in various shades of pink and orange. As much as impressive / 5 feet 1.52 meters) tall a Flamingo is empressive. It has a long flexible neck and a thick bill that curves down ward. are Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 4 Parentheses 1 Spelling 7 have certain There is five species of flamingos but all of them has certin things in common, including slender legs and webbed feet. flocks Highly sociable birds, flamingos gather in huge flox. flight ever If you see a group in flite you wont never forget the breathtaking sight. Hundreds of the birds fly in formation, flapping with their outstretched necks and their broad wings flaping. TUESDAY Week 20 an interesting When at rest flamingos present a equally intirsting Error Summary Language Usage 5 Punctuation: sight. Their supple necks twist, and coil with ease over their Comma 3 bodies. Flammingos are also famous for their one legged Hyphen 1 Question Mark 1 Flamingos poses. While wading in shallow water, they stand on one Spelling 6 leg and tuck the other leg up into the body. Did you ever do have wonder why they does this. Scientists has offered various behavior possible reasons for this behavyur. One posible reason, is that it regulate helps the birds conserve energy and reggulate their body reduces temperature. Another possible reason is that it reduce fatigue fahteeg. Yet another possibility is that the flamingos simply their want to dry out its legs. 88 2837.indb 88 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Science article: Pink Flamingos Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 20 Pink Flamingos These wading birds have a distinctive apearince, with plumage in various shades of pink and orange. As much as • commas • parentheses • double negatives 5 feet 1.52 meters) tall a Flamingo is empressive. It has a long flexible neck and a thick bill that curves down ward. There is five species of flamingos but all of them has certin things in common, including slender legs and webbed feet. Highly sociable birds, flamingos gather in huge flox. If you see a group in flite you wont never forget the breathtaking sight. Hundreds of the birds fly in formation, with their outstretched necks and their broad wings flaping. TUESDAY Week 20 When at rest flamingos present a equally intirsting sight. Their supple necks twist, and coil with ease over their bodies. Flammingos are also famous for their one legged poses. While wading in shallow water, they stand on one • hyphens • end punctuation • verbs • possessives leg and tuck the other leg up into the body. Did you ever wonder why they does this. Scientists has offered various reasons for this behavyur. One posible reason, is that it helps the birds conserve energy and reggulate their body temperature. Another possible reason is that it reduce fahteeg. Yet another possibility is that the flamingos simply want to dry out its legs. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 89 89 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Pink Flamingos (cont.) science article WEDNESDAY Week 20 characteristic is Another interesting characteristick of flamingos are shallow Error Summary Language Usage 2 Punctuation: the way they eat. Standing in shalow water, the birds stomp Apostrophe 5 there webbed feet to aggitate the mud. A flamingo hold’s its Comma 2 Hyphen 2 their agitate curved bill underwater and swings its head from side to side, Spelling 6 swishing muddy water into its bill with its thick tongue. Tiny act comb like structures in the bill acts as filters. They strain edible algae tiny mollusks and other eddibul organisms from the water in the same way that a colander strains pasta. The unique filter feeding system in the flamingos bill is unnique. No other birds have this feature. Its the birds food supply that gives the flamingo it’s pinkish or reddish color. THURSDAY Week 20 When it is time to breed flamingos gather in huge groups on the lake shore. In fact more than a million breed gather birds gathers on some large lakes in East africa to brede. Flamingos make nest’s of muddy clay piled several inches high Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 5 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 4 Spelling 4 into a cone shape. The female typically lays a single egg at take a time. Both parents takes care of the egg during the month before hatching. Chicks are snowy-white or gray at first. Two or three days after hatching the young can leave the nest. partially Adults feed the off spring parshally digested food that they takes regurgitate. It take time, though, for the babies to turn then were pink. Until than you might not even know they was flamingos! 90 2837.indb 90 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Science article: Pink Flamingos (cont.) Daily Paragraph Editing Name WEDNESDAY Week 20 Another interesting characteristick of flamingos are the way they eat. Standing in shalow water, the birds stomp there webbed feet to aggitate the mud. A flamingo hold’s its • apostrophes • verbs • hyphens curved bill underwater and swings its head from side to side, swishing muddy water into its bill with its thick tongue. Tiny comb like structures in the bill acts as filters. They strain algae tiny mollusks and other eddibul organisms from the water in the same way that a colander strains pasta. The filter feeding system in the flamingos bill is unnique. No other birds have this feature. Its the birds food supply that gives the flamingo it’s pinkish or reddish color. THURSDAY Week 20 When it is time to breed flamingos gather in huge groups on the lake shore. In fact more than a million birds gathers on some large lakes in East africa to brede. • commas • place names • compound words Flamingos make nest’s of muddy clay piled several inches high into a cone shape. The female typically lays a single egg at a time. Both parents takes care of the egg during the month before hatching. Chicks are snowy-white or gray at first. Two or three days after hatching the young can leave the nest. Adults feed the off spring parshally digested food that they regurgitate. It take time, though, for the babies to turn pink. Until than you might not even know they was flamingos! © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 91 91 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Four Letters INFORMAL LETTER MONDAY Week 21 Four Letters Dear aunt Pat Capitalization Thank you so much for the awsome birthday gift, your / gennerous check will be put to good use this Summer. mom taking 11 Punctuation: awesome generous Error Summary and dad are takeing me to egypt for the vacation of a Apostrophe 2 Comma 4 Exclamation Point 1 Period 3 Spelling 4 lifetime, I am so excited Weve been studying Egypt in my pyramids / History class and Im looking forward to seeing the peeramids at giza. After that we’ll visit the valley of the kings. I’ll bring back a nice souvenir for you / Your loving Nephew Kurt TUESDAY Dear Kurt Week 21 Error Summary Capitalization 5 Punctuation: great It was grate to hear from you. Your vacation plans sound amazing Dont forget to take lot’s of pictures. You may not be aware that I studied archaeology in college. I did fieldwork in Egypt and even examined some Apostrophe 3 Comma 2 Exclamation Point 1 Question Mark 1 Spelling 3 artifacts of the artifax found in Tutankhamens tomb. Since then /Archaeologists have learned much more about king tut and determined have even determend why he died at such a young age. Would you like to know what they have discovered. Love, aunt pat 92 2837.indb 92 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM INFORMAL Letter: Four Letters Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 21 Four Letters • personal names Dear aunt Pat Thank you so much for the awsome birthday gift, your gennerous check will be put to good use this Summer. mom • place names • run-on sentences • end punctuation and dad are takeing me to egypt for the vacation of a lifetime, I am so excited Weve been studying Egypt in my History class and Im looking forward to seeing the peeramids at giza. After that we’ll visit the valley of the kings. I’ll bring back a nice souvenir for you Your loving Nephew Kurt TUESDAY Week 21 Dear Kurt It was grate to hear from you. Your vacation plans sound amazing Dont forget to take lot’s of pictures. • apostrophes • end punctuation You may not be aware that I studied archaeology in college. I did fieldwork in Egypt and even examined some of the artifax found in Tutankhamens tomb. Since then Archaeologists have learned much more about king tut and have even determend why he died at such a young age. Would you like to know what they have discovered. Love, aunt pat © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 93 93 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Four Letters (cont.) INFORMAL letter WEDNESDAY Week 21 Dear Aunt pat You bet Id like to know! All I know about King Tut so far is that he became king after his fathers death. Tut was only about nine years old at the time. He died about ten know years later but I don’t think archaeologists knows why. Tut’s Error Summary Capitalization 5 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 4 Comma 4 Question Mark 1 Spelling 3 tomb toom is the only one in the Valley of the Kings that wasnt raiders robbed by ancient tomb raders. when we go to the egyptian treasures were Museum in cairo we’ll see the trezures that was found when Tuts tomb was excavated in 1922. What else do you know Your curious nephew kurt THURSDAY Week 21 Dear Kurt Did you know that more than 100 walking canes were found in Tut’s tomb. Scientists wondered why. X-rays and revealed a suffered an CT scan of the mummy riveeled that Tut had sufferred from a bone disease. Because his bones broke easily he used a cane to keep from falling. Other tests showed that he / Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 3 Period 1 Question Mark 1 Spelling 4 also had Malaria. Most likely, the young king died from a combination an infection combanation of a broken leg, a infekshun and malaria. Enjoy your trip, and Ill see you when you get back Love, Aunt pat 94 2837.indb 94 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing INFORMAL Letter: Four Letters (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 21 Dear Aunt pat You bet Id like to know! All I know about King Tut so far is that he became king after his fathers death. Tut was only about nine years old at the time. He died about ten • nationalities • place names • personal names • apostrophes years later but I don’t think archaeologists knows why. Tut’s toom is the only one in the Valley of the Kings that wasnt robbed by ancient tomb raders. when we go to the egyptian Museum in cairo we’ll see the trezures that was found when Tuts tomb was excavated in 1922. What else do you know Your curious nephew kurt THURSDAY Week 21 Dear Kurt Did you know that more than 100 walking canes were found in Tut’s tomb. Scientists wondered why. X-rays and • end punctuation • commas an CT scan of the mummy riveeled that Tut had sufferred from a bone disease. Because his bones broke easily he used a cane to keep from falling. Other tests showed that he also had Malaria. Most likely, the young king died from a combanation of a broken leg, a infekshun and malaria. Enjoy your trip, and Ill see you when you get back Love, Aunt pat © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 95 95 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Harbor Porpoises Make Comeback NEWS Article MONDAY Week 22 Harbor Porpoises Make Comeback absence January 2012. After a 65-year abscence, harbor began porpoises begun returning to the San Francisco bay last month. They had last been seen in the area shortly before quality Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Comma 3 Quotation Mark 2 Spelling 4 world war II. Wartime activities and poor water quallity drove drived away the small timid porpoises. Shipbuilding, an industry important indistree in the area at the time, contributed to researcher the bay’s polluted waters. Naomi Beeck a resercher who studies the porpoises remembers, My family lived in the nearby city of oakland in the 1940s. My mom recalls how awful the bay was then. The stench was dreadful. TUESDAY Week 22 passage led The 1972 passige of the clean water Act lead to an Error Summary Capitalization 4 Punctuation: improvement in the water quality of the bay. So, why didnt Apostrophe 3 the porpoises return in the 1970s The reason is that the Comma 3 Question Mark 1 porpoises’ food supply hadnt returned yet. It took time for recover Spelling 7 the bay to reccover from the pollution and for the schools / / of Herring and Anchovies to return. Now at last conditions sufficiently in the bay have improved suffishuntly to support marine generations life. Meanwhile, many gennerations of harbor porpoises have been born over this 65-year period. Consequently the bay doubt was no dout erased from the animals memories. Perhaps accident harbor porpoises simply rediscovered the bay by acsident. 96 2837.indb 96 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM NEWS article: Harbor Porpoises Make Comeback Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 22 Harbor Porpoises Make Comeback January 2012. After a 65-year abscence, harbor porpoises begun returning to the San Francisco bay last month. They had last been seen in the area shortly before • place names • historic events • verbs • quotation marks world war II. Wartime activities and poor water quallity drived away the small timid porpoises. Shipbuilding, an important indistree in the area at the time, contributed to the bay’s polluted waters. Naomi Beeck a resercher who studies the porpoises remembers, My family lived in the nearby city of oakland in the 1940s. My mom recalls how awful the bay was then. The stench was dreadful. TUESDAY Week 22 The 1972 passige of the clean water Act lead to an improvement in the water quality of the bay. So, why didnt the porpoises return in the 1970s The reason is that the • names of laws • apostrophes • commas porpoises’ food supply hadnt returned yet. It took time for the bay to reccover from the pollution and for the schools of Herring and Anchovies to return. Now at last conditions in the bay have improved suffishuntly to support marine life. Meanwhile, many gennerations of harbor porpoises have been born over this 65-year period. Consequently the bay was no dout erased from the animals memories. Perhaps harbor porpoises simply rediscovered the bay by acsident. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 97 97 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Harbor Porpoises Make Comeback (cont.) WEDNESDAY NEWS article Week 22 driven What else besides water quality may have drove away were Error Summary Language Usage 4 Punctuation: the harbor porpoises. Many things was going on during the Comma 5 1940s that might have frightened the shy animals. For one Period 2 Question Mark 1 bustling thing, the San Francisco Bay certainly was a busseling place. entrance an Spelling 5 The US Navy put a underwater net across the entrunse to the bay. This net which was seven miles long was installed to submarines prevent enemy submireens from entering the bay. In addition military the millitery set hundreds of mines just outside the Golden Gate. All of this activity plus the water pollution caused by an unfavorable manufacturing and raw sewage made the bay a unfaverible place for porpoises to live. THURSDAY Week 22 than Harbor porpoises are smaller then most porpoises; they average length implies avrij five feet (1.5 meters) in lenth. As their name imply, prefer they prefers to stay close to land rather than venture out into the open ocean, visitors who are lucky enough to catch sight cite of the porpoises are likely to hear them, too. As the Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Period 1 Quotation Mark 1 Spelling 6 sailors animal’s exhale, they make a puffing sound. Long ago, sailers used to call these porpoises “puffing pigs. The fact that creatures comfortable these creachures seem comfterble around boats in the bay is are a good sign. It means that researchers will be able to study the porpoises social structure and life cycle. It is also a good sign for our environment. 98 2837.indb 98 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing NEWS article: Harbor Porpoises Make Comeback (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 22 What else besides water quality may have drove away the harbor porpoises. Many things was going on during the 1940s that might have frightened the shy animals. For one • abbreviations • verbs • commas thing, the San Francisco Bay certainly was a busseling place. The US Navy put a underwater net across the entrunse to the bay. This net which was seven miles long was installed to prevent enemy submireens from entering the bay. In addition the millitery set hundreds of mines just outside the Golden Gate. All of this activity plus the water pollution caused by manufacturing and raw sewage made the bay a unfaverible place for porpoises to live. THURSDAY Week 22 Harbor porpoises are smaller then most porpoises; they avrij five feet (1.5 meters) in lenth. As their name imply, they prefers to stay close to land rather than venture out • verbs • apostrophes • quotation marks into the open ocean, visitors who are lucky enough to catch cite of the porpoises are likely to hear them, too. As the animal’s exhale, they make a puffing sound. Long ago, sailers used to call these porpoises “puffing pigs. The fact that these creachures seem comfterble around boats in the bay are a good sign. It means that researchers will be able to study the porpoises social structure and life cycle. It is also a good sign for our environment. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 99 99 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Billy Fisher, Pony Express Rider biography MONDAY Week 23 Billy Fisher, Pony Express Rider Capitalization 9 Punctuation: William f Fisher, better known as billy fisher, was born in 1839 in england. He died in 1919 in i daho, five weeks shy of his eightieth birthday. Between those two date’s, he had exciting Error Summary highlight Apostrophe 1 Comma 2 Period 1 Spelling 5 an exciteing life. The hilight may have been the time he spent working for the pony express. Before 1860 mail delivery was a slow process, taking Tensions 24 days between missouri and the West Coast. Tenshunz in necessary the years before the Civil war made it necesairy to speed Riders up news delivery. Ridders like Billy Fisher had to be prepared for long wearisome journeys. TUESDAY Week 23 was The entire Pony Express route were almost 2,000 miles (3,220 kilometers) long. It stretched from St Joseph Missouri, to sacramento california. Fisher, who rode mainly in nevada dedicated and utah was a fearless deddecated rider. He once covered incredibly Error Summary Capitalization 7 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Comma 5 Period 1 Spelling 4 300 miles (482.8 kilometers) in 30 hours. This was incredible fast, considering that he also switched horses at several stations stayshuns along the way. The pony express was in business for only 18 months. The nation no longer needed it after the transcontinental telegraph daring tellegraf was developed. However stories of brave and darring riders like fisher persist even today. 100 2837.indb 100 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM BIOGRAPHY: Billy Fisher, Pony Express Rider Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 23 Billy Fisher, Pony Express Rider William f Fisher, better known as billy fisher, was born in 1839 in england. He died in 1919 in idaho, five weeks shy of his eightieth birthday. Between those two date’s, he had • personal names • place names • company names • historic events an exciteing life. The hilight may have been the time he spent working for the pony express. Before 1860 mail delivery was a slow process, taking 24 days between missouri and the West Coast. Tenshunz in the years before the Civil war made it necesairy to speed up news delivery. Ridders like Billy Fisher had to be prepared for long wearisome journeys. TUESDAY Week 23 The entire Pony Express route were almost 2,000 miles (3,220 kilometers) long. It stretched from St Joseph Missouri, to sacramento california. Fisher, who rode mainly in nevada and utah was a fearless deddecated rider. He once covered • abbreviations • place names • commas • adverbs 300 miles (482.8 kilometers) in 30 hours. This was incredible fast, considering that he also switched horses at several stayshuns along the way. The pony express was in business for only 18 months. The nation no longer needed it after the transcontinental tellegraf was developed. However stories of brave and darring riders like fisher persist even today. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 101 101 9/26/12 12:49 PM EDITING KEY: Billy Fisher, Pony Express Rider (cont.) biography WEDNESDAY Week 23 One dramatic story from Fishers Pony Express days almost describes describe a time when he all most died. It was a cold winter severe day in January 1861. Fisher lost his way during a seveer snow storm. Exhausted and chilled to the bone, he climbed Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe Spelling 2 6 collapsed horse down from his hoarse and collapse on a clearing that was himself some what protected by trees. He propped hisself up against a tree trunk and huddled against the cold wind. He later admitted admited that he had been tempted to start a fire using the united states mail to stay warm, but he couldnt bring himself to do it. Instead, he just rested on the ground and waited for the storm to end. THURSDAY Week 23 Meanwhile, Fisher began to fall asleep—that is, until he felt something jump on his legs and lick his face. At first, he didnt realize what was happening nor did he realize how close he was to freezing. He felt the licking again so he opened staring his eyes. A rabbit was stairing into his face! Fisher’s startled Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 6 Quotation Mark 2 Spelling 3 reaction, caused the rabbit to scamper away. Fisher said, “that the rabbit had saved his life.” If the rabbit hadnt awakened him fisher might have died from the cold. As it then was, he got up, and started moving around. He than noticed cabin refuge a light in a nearby cabbin, where he sought refyooge from the cold. The next day, Fisher resumed his journey. 102 2837.indb 102 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:49 PM Daily Paragraph Editing Biography: Billy Fisher, Pony Express Rider (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 23 One dramatic story from Fishers Pony Express days describe a time when he all most died. It was a cold winter day in January 1861. Fisher lost his way during a seveer • verbs • apostrophes • compound words snow storm. Exhausted and chilled to the bone, he climbed down from his hoarse and collapse on a clearing that was some what protected by trees. He propped hisself up against a tree trunk and huddled against the cold wind. He later admited that he had been tempted to start a fire using the united states mail to stay warm, but he couldnt bring himself to do it. Instead, he just rested on the ground and waited for the storm to end. THURSDAY Week 23 Meanwhile, Fisher began to fall asleep—that is, until he felt something jump on his legs and lick his face. At first, he didnt realize what was happening nor did he realize how close • run-on sentences • commas • quotation marks he was to freezing. He felt the licking again so he opened his eyes. A rabbit was stairing into his face! Fisher’s startled reaction, caused the rabbit to scamper away. Fisher said, “that the rabbit had saved his life.” If the rabbit hadnt awakened him fisher might have died from the cold. As it was, he got up, and started moving around. He than noticed a light in a nearby cabbin, where he sought refyooge from the cold. The next day, Fisher resumed his journey. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 103 103 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Balto HISTORY ARTICLE MONDAY Week 24 Balto Visitors Error Summary Capitalization admire Visiters to central Park in New York City can admier Beneath the bronze statue of balto a siberian husky sled dog. Beneth plaque the statue is a plack with the following inscription: Dedicated spirit to the indomitable spirrit of the sled dogs that relayed 7 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 2 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 2 Spelling 9 treacherous hundred antitoxin six hunderd miles over rough ice across trecherous blizzards relief waters through icy blizards from Nenana to the releif of / stricken Nome in the Winter of 1925”. The statue was placed there on december 17 1925, less than a year after the real huskys heroic race to nome, alaska. Why did the story of this race capture the hearts of New Yorkers TUESDAY Week 24 an outbreak In january 1925, the city of Nome faced a outbrake an of diphtheria a infectious bacterial disease that often fatal had was fatel. The disease have killed one child already and doctor receive other children were ill. If Nome’s docter didn’t recieve the consequences Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Comma 4 Parentheses 1 Spelling 5 lifesaving serum immediately, the consequenses would be dire. Serum was available in anchorage, which was about 1,000 miles (1,610 kilometers) away but making the journey by airplane wasn’t an option. So officials put the serum on a train headed for nenana, the last stop on the line. Sled / Dogs would take the serum the rest of the way which was a distance of about 650 miles (1,046 kilometers . 104 2837.indb 104 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM history article: Balto Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 24 Balto Visiters to central Park in New York City can admier the bronze statue of balto a siberian husky sled dog. Beneth • place names • quotation marks • dates the statue is a plack with the following inscription: Dedicated to the indomitable spirrit of the sled dogs that relayed antitoxin six hunderd miles over rough ice across trecherous waters through icy blizards from Nenana to the releif of stricken Nome in the Winter of 1925”. The statue was placed there on december 17 1925, less than a year after the real huskys heroic race to nome, alaska. Why did the story of this race capture the hearts of New Yorkers TUESDAY Week 24 In january 1925, the city of Nome faced a outbrake of diphtheria a infectious bacterial disease that often was fatel. The disease have killed one child already and • place names • commas • parentheses other children were ill. If Nome’s docter didn’t recieve the lifesaving serum immediately, the consequenses would be dire. Serum was available in anchorage, which was about 1,000 miles (1,610 kilometers) away but making the journey by airplane wasn’t an option. So officials put the serum on a train headed for nenana, the last stop on the line. Sled Dogs would take the serum the rest of the way which was a distance of about 650 miles (1,046 kilometers. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 105 105 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Balto (cont.) history article WEDNESDAY Week 24 than More then 20 mushers (dog sled drivers and 100 dogs took part in the relay race, the first musher left Nenana delivered just before midnight on january 27. The serum was dellivered February to Nome on Febuary 2 at 530 in the morning. The teams approximately a had covered aproximately 650 miles in about five and an half days, this was a record-setting time. Balto was the dog Error Summary Capitalization 7 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Colon 1 Comma 2 Parentheses 1 Period 3 Spelling 4 leading the last team and norwegian-born gunnar kaasen was the musher. Kaasen said that whiteout conditions on the trail made it almost impossible for him to see, however Balto was trail always able to keep to the trial, even after strong winds flipped the sled over. THURSDAY Week 24 Called the “Great Race of Mercy, the event was big news. Although five people died from diphtheria that winter worse in Nome, the death toll would have been much worst without the serum. Kaasen and balto did their part but musher are Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Comma 2 Quotation Mark 1 Spelling 2 l eonhard seppala and his lead dog, Togo, is widely believed heroes to be the genuine heros. They transported the serum 91 farthest miles (146 kilometers), the single farther distance of any most dangerous team. They also traveled over the dangerousest part of the route. Balto got most of the glory, though because he was the one that reached the goal. The statue in Central Park achievement commemorates his acheivemunt. 106 2837.indb 106 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing history article: Balto (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 24 More then 20 mushers (dog sled drivers and 100 dogs took part in the relay race, the first musher left Nenana just before midnight on january 27. The serum was dellivered to Nome on Febuary 2 at 530 in the morning. The teams • parentheses • time • run-on sentences • nationalities had covered aproximately 650 miles in about five and an half days, this was a record-setting time. Balto was the dog leading the last team and norwegian-born gunnar kaasen was the musher. Kaasen said that whiteout conditions on the trail made it almost impossible for him to see, however Balto was always able to keep to the trial, even after strong winds flipped the sled over. THURSDAY Week 24 Called the “Great Race of Mercy, the event was big news. Although five people died from diphtheria that winter in Nome, the death toll would have been much worst without • quotation marks • words that compare the serum. Kaasen and balto did their part but musher leonhard seppala and his lead dog, Togo, is widely believed to be the genuine heros. They transported the serum 91 miles (146 kilometers), the single farther distance of any team. They also traveled over the dangerousest part of the route. Balto got most of the glory, though because he was the one that reached the goal. The statue in Central Park commemorates his acheivemunt. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 107 107 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: The Mystery of the Space Rocks Mystery MONDAY Week 25 The Mystery of the Space Rocks mere Liam read the ad again. “For a meer $49.95 including / tax, Liam read aloud, “You can enroll in our online science course entitles coarse. This sum also entitels you to a rock from Saturn. Error Summary Capitalization 3 Punctuation: Period 2 Quotation Mark 3 Spelling 7 regular We’ll send you this rock by reguler mail and provide an online physical worksheet on the phisicle properties of rocks, one of the lessons will help you identify rocks and minerals.” “I have just enough money to do this”, said Liam, permission wallet / checking his wollit. Then he got permishion from his Mom to charge the enrollment fee to her credit card. He gave her $50 to cover the charge. “Keep the change, he told her TUESDAY Week 25 forward Liam looked foreword to showing the rock to Adam his Error Summary Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 best freind. He checked the mail every day for fore weeks, Comma 3 but nothing had arrived. On the twenty ninth-day, he checked Hyphen 2 Period 1 Question Mark 1 four friend the mail again, still there was nothing. Liam was enjoying his beginning online science lessons, but he was begining to feel that he wasn’t Spelling 10 lessons was’nt getting his moneys worth. Most of the lessins were available full of information that was avalible online for free. Why had he been such a fool to pay $49.95. If only that rock would surprise arrive arive he wouldnt feel so cheated. He wanted to suprise his geology friend. Adam was crazy about geolegie and Liam knew that the rock from Saturn would amaze him. 108 2837.indb 108 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Mystery: The Mystery of the Space Rocks Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 25 The Mystery of the Space Rocks Liam read the ad again. “For a meer $49.95 including tax, Liam read aloud, “You can enroll in our online science • dialogue • run-on sentences coarse. This sum also entitels you to a rock from Saturn. We’ll send you this rock by reguler mail and provide an online worksheet on the phisicle properties of rocks, one of the lessons will help you identify rocks and minerals.” “I have just enough money to do this”, said Liam, checking his wollit. Then he got permishion from his Mom to charge the enrollment fee to her credit card. He gave her $50 to cover the charge. “Keep the change, he told her TUESDAY Week 25 Liam looked foreword to showing the rock to Adam his best freind. He checked the mail every day for fore weeks, but nothing had arrived. On the twenty ninth-day, he checked • apostrophes • hyphens • run-on sentences the mail again, still there was nothing. Liam was enjoying his online science lessons, but he was begining to feel that he was’nt getting his moneys worth. Most of the lessins were full of information that was avalible online for free. Why had he been such a fool to pay $49.95. If only that rock would arive he wouldnt feel so cheated. He wanted to suprise his friend. Adam was crazy about geolegie and Liam knew that the rock from Saturn would amaze him. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 109 109 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: The Mystery of the Space Rocks (cont.) Mystery WEDNESDAY Week 25 package tore Finally, the packedge arrived. Liam tears open the box, and admired the rock. It was larger than he had expected, i t looked a lot like rocks he saw all the time, but he was sure that hed be able to prove that it was special. After different all it was from Saturn so it had to be differant from Earth rocks. He went online to get the worksheet, then he hurried Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Apostrophe 4 Comma 4 Period 3 Quotation Mark 2 Spelling 4 excitement over to Adams house to share his excitment. heard “Liam somebodys tricking you, said Adam, after he herd the story. “That rock cant be from Saturn, but we can still have fun testing the physical properties and figuring out what kind of rock it is THURSDAY Week 25 “How do you know its not from Saturn” asked l iam. “Well, that’s no mystery, said Adam. Saturn is a gas / giant, like jupiter and neptune. Its mostly Hydrogen and /Helium. wouldn’t Even if Saturns’ core is made of solid rock, we any has would’nt have no rocks from there. No spaceship have ever Error Summary Capitalization 6 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 5 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 5 Spelling 2 traveled there and back. Lets read the ad again.” Liam quickly found the ad. “Saturn Science Education, he read aloud, offers a special course. Study rocks from / around the World. Well send you one each month.” “See, Liam? Saturn is the name of the company, not planet the planit where the rock comes from! explained Adam. 110 2837.indb 110 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing mystery: The Mystery of the Space Rocks (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 25 Finally, the packedge arrived. Liam tears open the box, and admired the rock. It was larger than he had expected, it looked a lot like rocks he saw all the time, but he was • verbs • apostrophes • dialogue sure that hed be able to prove that it was special. After all it was from Saturn so it had to be differant from Earth rocks. He went online to get the worksheet, then he hurried over to Adams house to share his excitment. “Liam somebodys tricking you, said Adam, after he herd the story. “That rock cant be from Saturn, but we can still have fun testing the physical properties and figuring out what kind of rock it is THURSDAY Week 25 “How do you know its not from Saturn” asked liam. “Well, that’s no mystery, said Adam. Saturn is a gas giant, like jupiter and neptune. Its mostly Hydrogen and • apostrophes • dialogue • names of planets Helium. Even if Saturns’ core is made of solid rock, we would’nt have no rocks from there. No spaceship have ever traveled there and back. Lets read the ad again.” Liam quickly found the ad. “Saturn Science Education, he read aloud, offers a special course. Study rocks from around the World. Well send you one each month.” “See, Liam? Saturn is the name of the company, not the planit where the rock comes from! explained Adam. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 111 111 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Pecos Bill Rides a Tornado tall tale MONDAY Week 26 Pecos Bill Rides a Tornado Language Usage knowledge an It is common knollege that Pecos Bill was quite a accomplished acommplished rider. Not a bronco alive could throw him. In professional fact I knew of only one time in Bills profeshunal life when story thrown Error Summary 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 1 Hyphen 1 Spelling 12 he had been throwed. I’d heard the storey from an old-timer witnessed who’d witnist the event with his own eyes. He told me that decided tornado Pecos Bill had simply desided one day to ride a tornadoe. Bill ridiculous gotten friends had got the riddiculus notion while visiting frends in the state of Kansas. Not one of Bill’s side kicks could talk him out of the idea. That was an other well known thing about Pecos Bill: stubborn He was as stuborn as a mule. TUESDAY Week 26 As every one knew, Pecos Bill could not be stopped Error Summary Language Usage 4 Punctuation: once he got an idea. Further more, Bill wasnt planning to ride Apostrophe 2 just any little tornado. He let the small ones go buy and he Comma 7 by most gigantic seen waited for the gigantickest tornado any one had ever saw. As Spelling 4 the twister neared Kansas the sky turned purple and black. The tornado bellowed so loudly that it woke up babies on promptly the other side of the world! Bill acted prompt. He grabbed that surly tornado slammed it to the ground and hopped right on it’s back. The tornado bucked, and kicked, and conspicuously yelled conspicuous enough to be heard all the way in Texas. No matter what that tornado did Bill held on. 112 2837.indb 112 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Tall tale: Pecos Bill Rides a Tornado Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 26 Pecos Bill Rides a Tornado It is common knollege that Pecos Bill was quite a acommplished rider. Not a bronco alive could throw him. In • verbs • compound words • hyphens fact I knew of only one time in Bills profeshunal life when he had been throwed. I’d heard the storey from an old-timer who’d witnist the event with his own eyes. He told me that Pecos Bill had simply desided one day to ride a tornadoe. Bill had got the riddiculus notion while visiting frends in the state of Kansas. Not one of Bill’s side kicks could talk him out of the idea. That was an other well known thing about Pecos Bill: He was as stuborn as a mule. TUESDAY Week 26 As every one knew, Pecos Bill could not be stopped once he got an idea. Further more, Bill wasnt planning to ride just any little tornado. He let the small ones go buy and he waited for the gigantickest tornado any one had ever saw. As the twister neared Kansas the sky turned purple and black. • commas • compound words • words that compare • adverbs The tornado bellowed so loudly that it woke up babies on the other side of the world! Bill acted prompt. He grabbed that surly tornado slammed it to the ground and hopped right on it’s back. The tornado bucked, and kicked, and yelled conspicuous enough to be heard all the way in Texas. No matter what that tornado did Bill held on. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 113 113 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Pecos Bill Rides a Tornado (cont.) Tall Tale WEDNESDAY Week 26 tried as that angry tornado tryed to throw Bill off its’ back Error Summary Capitalization 4 Punctuation: it churned up the local rivers and tied them into knots. No Apostrophe 2 forrest was safe from the fury of that tornado, either. The Comma 2 Period 1 Quotation Mark 1 forest twister flattened all of the forests in one spot along the border boarder between Texas and new mexico, turning the trees Spelling 7 blew into tooth picks that blue out to sea. Folks renamed the area lamented the “Staked Plains and lammented the loss of 30,000 square miles of prime timber land. This didnt bother Bill at all, though. He continued riding that tornado, and stayed as calm as a june day. Every now and then, he’d give it a jab with his sharp spurs THURSDAY ever Week 26 At last, that wily tornado figured out that it wasn’t run never going to get pecos Bill off it’s back. It had ran out of tricks and nothing had worked, thats when it headed over to california and rained itself out. There was so much rain that it filled the grand canyon, way over in Arizona. When wound practically the tornado wownd down to practikly nothing, Bill fell off. He Error Summary Capitalization 9 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 4 Comma 1 Period 2 Quotation Mark 2 Spelling 2 have must of let his attention slip, for just a second. He hit the / ground with so much force. That he sank below sea level. People named that place death valley”. Anyway, it was the / tornado that gave folk’s the idea for the Rodeo. These days, however, most cowboys prefer to ride bronco’s. 114 2837.indb 114 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Tall tale: Pecos Bill Rides a Tornado (cont.) Daily Paragraph Editing Name WEDNESDAY Week 26 as that angry tornado tryed to throw Bill off its’ back it churned up the local rivers and tied them into knots. No forrest was safe from the fury of that tornado, either. The • compound words • special words in quotation marks twister flattened all of the forests in one spot along the boarder between Texas and new mexico, turning the trees into tooth picks that blue out to sea. Folks renamed the area the “Staked Plains and lammented the loss of 30,000 square miles of prime timber land. This didnt bother Bill at all, though. He continued riding that tornado, and stayed as calm as a june day. Every now and then, he’d give it a jab with his sharp spurs THURSDAY Week 26 At last, that wily tornado figured out that it wasn’t never going to get pecos Bill off it’s back. It had ran out of tricks and nothing had worked, thats when it headed over to california and rained itself out. There was so much rain • place names • run-on sentences • incomplete sentences that it filled the grand canyon, way over in Arizona. When the tornado wownd down to practikly nothing, Bill fell off. He must of let his attention slip, for just a second. He hit the ground with so much force. That he sank below sea level. People named that place death valley”. Anyway, it was the tornado that gave folk’s the idea for the Rodeo. These days, however, most cowboys prefer to ride bronco’s. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 115 115 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Chasing Twisters INTERVIEW MONDAY Week 27 Chasing Twisters weather Joshua Wurman is a wether scientist who studies twisters or tornadoes. What, precisely, are tornadoes, and column where does Wurman go to find them. A tornado is a colum stretches of fast-spinning air that stretch from the ground to storm clouds above. Tornadoes can pack winds of up to 300 miles Error Summary Capitalization 7 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Comma 6 Parentheses 1 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 1 Spelling 4 (483) kilometers per hour. When they hit a populated area, continent occur they can be devastating. Tornadoes occurs on every contenent except accept antarctica. Most however, occur in the United States an / covers in a area named “Tornado Alley. Which cover northern Texas and much of oklahoma kansas nebraska and south dakota. TUESDAY Week 27 takes road Wurmans work take him on the rode a lot. We catch / up with him for this Interview to learn more about his job. Q: How did you become interested, in studying storms represented A: Tornadoes always repressented the unknown to me. Theyre / a mystery of Nature. I wanted to see what was behind that mystery in order to find out how tornadoes worked. Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 5 Comma 2 Period 1 Question Mark 2 Spelling 5 does Q: How do it feel to see a twister at close range hectic A: Its exciting, but also hecktick. While Im there, I have juggle vehicles to jugle teams of people in various vehicals all around the tornado? I have to make sure the team’s can get in and out of the area safely. 116 2837.indb 116 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM INTERVIEW: Chasing Twisters Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 27 Chasing Twisters Joshua Wurman is a wether scientist who studies twisters or tornadoes. What, precisely, are tornadoes, and where does Wurman go to find them. A tornado is a colum • parentheses • place names • special words in quotation marks of fast-spinning air that stretch from the ground to storm clouds above. Tornadoes can pack winds of up to 300 miles (483) kilometers per hour. When they hit a populated area, they can be devastating. Tornadoes occurs on every contenent accept antarctica. Most however, occur in the United States in a area named “Tornado Alley. Which cover northern Texas and much of oklahoma kansas nebraska and south dakota. TUESDAY Week 27 Wurmans work take him on the rode a lot. We catch up with him for this Interview to learn more about his job. Q: How did you become interested, in studying storms • apostrophes • verbs A: Tornadoes always repressented the unknown to me. Theyre a mystery of Nature. I wanted to see what was behind that mystery in order to find out how tornadoes worked. Q: How do it feel to see a twister at close range A: Its exciting, but also hecktick. While Im there, I have to jugle teams of people in various vehicals all around the tornado? I have to make sure the team’s can get in and out of the area safely. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 117 117 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Chasing Twisters (cont.) INTERVIEW WEDNESDAY Week 27 Q: Obviously chasing twisters is dangerous work. How do you crew make sure that you and your crue stay safe? Capitalization 3 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: are an mobile Error Summary A: Our moble radar trucks is a effective safety tool. You’re Q: Your’e talking about Doppler on Wheels or DOWs right? equipment A: Thats correct. With this equipmunt, we can tell how big Apostrophe 2 Comma 6 Parentheses 1 Spelling 6 whether the tornado is, how strong it is and weather its getting more intense intents. We can also measure the wind speed, and direction. We place the d o w trucks so they have different views of the tornado. The idea is to get them as close as possible about two or three miles away) so we can collect data as the twister moves. As you know the tornado is a moving target. THURSDAY Week 27 expect Ultimately Q: Ultamately, what do you ikspeck to learn A: We hope to find out more about the structure of tornadoes and how they forms; then we can get better at lead currently fourcasting them. The average leed time currantly is less / Capitalization 3 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: form forecasting Error Summary doesn’t than 15 minutes. Which does’nt give people in the area much Comma 1 Period 2 Question Mark 2 Spelling 8 are time to prepare. Also, more than half of the warnings is false alarms, we need to predict with greater accuracy. Q: what advice do you have for anyone who are interested in chasing tornadoes experienced A: My advice is to find an expeariensed partner and to learn fascinating about storms first. Tornadoes are fassinating but dangerous 118 2837.indb 118 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing INTERVIEW: Chasing Twisters (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 27 Q: Obviously chasing twisters is dangerous work. How do you make sure that you and your crue stay safe? • commas • apostrophes A: Our moble radar trucks is a effective safety tool. Q: Your’e talking about Doppler on Wheels or DOWs right? A: Thats correct. With this equipmunt, we can tell how big the tornado is, how strong it is and weather its getting more intents. We can also measure the wind speed, and direction. We place the d o w trucks so they have different views of the tornado. The idea is to get them as close as possible about two or three miles away) so we can collect data as the twister moves. As you know the tornado is a moving target. THURSDAY Week 27 Q: Ultamately, what do you ikspeck to learn A: We hope to find out more about the structure of tornadoes and how they forms; then we can get better at fourcasting them. The average leed time currantly is less • end punctuation • incomplete sentences • run-on sentences than 15 minutes. Which does’nt give people in the area much time to prepare. Also, more than half of the warnings is false alarms, we need to predict with greater accuracy. Q: what advice do you have for anyone who are interested in chasing tornadoes A: My advice is to find an expeariensed partner and to learn about storms first. Tornadoes are fassinating but dangerous © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 119 119 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: The Community Garden realistic fiction MONDAY Week 28 The Community Garden It was a sad day in my neighborhood when the Apartments Two city officials wearing suits and carrying clip boards had / came by. “This Apartment building is unsafe” they said. to residents protect the residants, we have to demolish it”. Capitalization 2 Language Usage 5 Punctuation: torn nineteenth century Pettigrew Appartments were tore down. come Error Summary Apostrophe 1 Comma 2 Hyphen 2 Quotation Mark 2 Spelling 5 moved Within a few months, all of the residents had move wrecking to other buildings. A crane with a recking ball arrived one morning mourning. By noon that day the old fashioned building had knocked been knock to the ground. Worker’s took the rubble away in left trucks and leaved an empty lot in the middle of the block. TUESDAY Week 28 become an A year later, the lot had became a eyesore, full of weeds and trash. Former resident’s came by and stared sorrowfully have sorroefully at the space. “At one time that building could of been saved, said Mrs O’Leary, but no one even tried. terribly “I feel terrible melancholy to see this empty lot, said Error Summary Language Usage 6 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Comma 2 Period 2 Quotation Mark 5 Spelling 4 Mr Jameson. “My kids grew up at the old Pettigrew. We were proud of the place. Now theres nothing here to give us an pride. Our old home is just a ugly, vacant, city lot. came Thats when the idea come to me. We could transform that eyesoar into a place that neighbors could call their own. community seemed A comunity garden seamed like the perfect place. 120 2837.indb 120 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM realistic fiction: The Community Garden Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 28 The Community Garden It was a sad day in my neighborhood when the nineteenth century Pettigrew Appartments were tore down. Two city officials wearing suits and carrying clip boards had • names of buildings • verbs • hyphens • compound words came by. “This Apartment building is unsafe” they said. to protect the residants, we have to demolish it”. Within a few months, all of the residents had move to other buildings. A crane with a recking ball arrived one mourning. By noon that day the old fashioned building had been knock to the ground. Worker’s took the rubble away in trucks and leaved an empty lot in the middle of the block. TUESDAY Week 28 A year later, the lot had became a eyesore, full of weeds and trash. Former resident’s came by and stared sorroefully at the space. “At one time that building could of • verbs • abbreviations • dialogue been saved, said Mrs O’Leary, but no one even tried. “I feel terrible melancholy to see this empty lot, said Mr Jameson. “My kids grew up at the old Pettigrew. We were proud of the place. Now theres nothing here to give us pride. Our old home is just a ugly, vacant, city lot. Thats when the idea come to me. We could transform that eyesoar into a place that neighbors could call their own. A comunity garden seamed like the perfect place. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 121 121 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: The Community Garden (cont.) realistic fiction WEDNESDAY Week 28 I used My friend l isa and me went to see mr Green who use to work for the city. We thought he might have some inside Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Comma 5 was a program, he said, that let people rent emtey lots Period 2 belonging to the city. Im not sure if its still in place but Quotation Mark 2 information concerning city policies, about vacant lots. “there empty inquire came you could inkwire at the city offices” So thats how it all come Spelling 5 about. Lisa and I learned that we needed to collect a hundred signatures signiturs on a petition. With that and one dollar we could promised rent the lot if we prommised to improve it. Getting the was signatures were easy. Everyone in the neighbor hood was sick of seeing that weedy trash-filled lot. THURSDAY Week 28 within two weeks we had rented the lot from the I / City. The next saturday, Lisa and me started picking up the curb trash putting it in bags and carrying it to the cerb. When saw neighbors seen what we were doing they offered to help. an Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 6 Punctuation: Comma 6 Quotation Mark 1 Spelling spare 5 Everyone seemed to have at least a hour to spair. Friends called friends, and very soon the lot was cleared and ready We for planting. Us all shared ideas about what to plant. By thriving that summer, we had a thriveing garden with flowers, and vegetables, of all kinds. Today, we even have a few benches where sit is wear people can set and enjoy the view. Now all we need are suggest a name for the place. I’m going to sugest “New memories”. 122 2837.indb 122 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing realistic fiction: The Community Garden (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 28 My friend lisa and me went to see mr Green who use to work for the city. We thought he might have some inside information concerning city policies, about vacant lots. “there • pronouns • dialogue • place names was a program, he said, that let people rent emtey lots belonging to the city. Im not sure if its still in place but you could inkwire at the city offices” So thats how it all come about. Lisa and I learned that we needed to collect a hundred signiturs on a petition. With that and one dollar we could rent the lot if we prommised to improve it. Getting the signatures were easy. Everyone in the neighbor hood was sick of seeing that weedy trash-filled lot. THURSDAY Week 28 within two weeks we had rented the lot from the City. The next saturday, Lisa and me started picking up the trash putting it in bags and carrying it to the cerb. When • verbs • commas neighbors seen what we were doing they offered to help. Everyone seemed to have at least a hour to spair. Friends called friends, and very soon the lot was cleared and ready for planting. Us all shared ideas about what to plant. By that summer, we had a thriveing garden with flowers, and vegetables, of all kinds. Today, we even have a few benches wear people can set and enjoy the view. Now all we need are a name for the place. I’m going to sugest “New memories”. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 123 123 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Time to Sleep HEALTH article MONDAY Week 29 Time to Sleep daily Everyone needs a certain amount of sleep daylie but require healthy than some people requires more then others. Whereas some helthy any adults dont need no more than six hours of sleep others get arent at their best unless they gets ten or even twelve change Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 5 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Comma 3 Period 1 Spelling 5 mature hours. Actually our sleep requirements changes as we matoor. Babies need about eighteen hours of sleep a day. Most children by age 10 sleep only nine to ten hours per night, slightly most teenagers sleep about nine hours—slitely more than the average for adults. No matter what your age, its important basis to get an adequate amount of sleep on a regular bases. TUESDAY Week 29 gives Sleep give us a chance to rest our bodies and recover from daily stress It also gives our brains time to dream which is one way that brains process the information that we waking acquire acquires during wakeing hours. You may be surprised, to learn that our minds remain active as we sleep. How do we know / Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Comma 5 Period 2 Question Mark 1 Spelling 4 instruments / this. In Sleep Studies patients are attached to insturments that measure brain activity as well as breathing heart rate analyze and muscle movements These studies analyzes a pattern alternates main that alternate between two mane types of sleep: rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM sleep. A typical cycle lasts ninety roughly ninty minutes and repeats five times a night. 124 2837.indb 124 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM HEALTH article: Time to Sleep Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 29 Time to Sleep Everyone needs a certain amount of sleep daylie but some people requires more then others. Whereas some helthy • commas • verbs • run-on sentences adults dont need no more than six hours of sleep others arent at their best unless they gets ten or even twelve hours. Actually our sleep requirements changes as we matoor. Babies need about eighteen hours of sleep a day. Most children by age 10 sleep only nine to ten hours per night, most teenagers sleep about nine hours—slitely more than the average for adults. No matter what your age, its important to get an adequate amount of sleep on a regular bases. TUESDAY Week 29 Sleep give us a chance to rest our bodies and recover from daily stress It also gives our brains time to dream which is one way that brains process the information that we • verbs • end punctuation • commas acquires during wakeing hours. You may be surprised, to learn that our minds remain active as we sleep. How do we know this. In Sleep Studies patients are attached to insturments that measure brain activity as well as breathing heart rate and muscle movements These studies analyzes a pattern that alternate between two mane types of sleep: rapid eye movement (REM) and non-REM sleep. A typical cycle lasts roughly ninty minutes and repeats five times a night. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 125 125 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Time to Sleep (cont.) HEALTH ARTICLE WEDNESDAY Week 29 Drowsiness is the first stage of non-REM sleep which gradually Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 6 deepens gradual during the sleep cycle. In the deep-sleep Punctuation: stage of non REM sleep, the body rests and recharge. This Comma 5 Hyphen 1 Period 1 recharges builds is the time when the body build new muscle and bone tissue. experience REM sleep is when people experiants dreams. This period Spelling 3 of sleep lasts about ten minutes at a time but lengthens, subsequent with subsequint sleep cycles. During r e m sleep, most of the relax muscles of the body relaxes but the heart rate and breathing suddenly rise and fall sudden. Also during REM sleep, the eyes make distinctive give short quick jerky movements, these distinktif movements gives REM sleep its name. THURSDAY Week 29 say Some people says that they never dream at night. The fact is, everyone dreams during REM sleep but people dont their always remember they’re dreams. Remembering our dreams valuable can be valuble. Suppose you have a problem to solve, the come solution just might came to you in a dream. Thats why Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 4 Comma 4 Period 2 Spelling 5 people say theyll “sleep on it” when they have a problem, surface the solution may surfuce from the subconscious mind. Artists, writers and other creative thinkers, often get ideas from composer their dreams. Wolfgang Mozart the famous composor, for example, claimed that all the music he wrote came to him dreams from his dreems. So being a dreamers a good thing! 126 2837.indb 126 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing HEALTH article: Time to Sleep (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 29 Drowsiness is the first stage of non-REM sleep which deepens gradual during the sleep cycle. In the deep-sleep stage of non REM sleep, the body rests and recharge. This • adverbs • hyphens is the time when the body build new muscle and bone tissue. REM sleep is when people experiants dreams. This period of sleep lasts about ten minutes at a time but lengthens, with subsequint sleep cycles. During r e m sleep, most of the muscles of the body relaxes but the heart rate and breathing rise and fall sudden. Also during REM sleep, the eyes make short quick jerky movements, these distinktif movements gives REM sleep its name. THURSDAY Week 29 Some people says that they never dream at night. The fact is, everyone dreams during REM sleep but people dont always remember they’re dreams. Remembering our dreams • apostrophes • run-on sentences can be valuble. Suppose you have a problem to solve, the solution just might came to you in a dream. Thats why people say theyll “sleep on it” when they have a problem, the solution may surfuce from the subconscious mind. Artists, writers and other creative thinkers, often get ideas from their dreams. Wolfgang Mozart the famous composor, for example, claimed that all the music he wrote came to him from his dreems. So being a dreamers a good thing! © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 127 127 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: A Royal Butterfly science article MONDAY Week 30 A Royal Butterfly most The monarch is one of the largest, and colorfulest Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 5 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 butterflies. The wing span on this insect are three to five Comma 5 inches accros. It’s dazzling, orange and black wings makes Period 1 Quotation Mark 1 is across make it them easy to see. You might think that the bright colors attract prey Spelling 6 would attracts predators, and make the monarch easy pray. predators However, predaters know better than to feast on this attractive butterfly. The atractive colors serve as a warning not an invitation to predators. l ike a flashing red light at a corner, the colors scream, Stop! danger!” You may wonder whats so poisonous dangerous about this butterfly? Its’ body is poisinous! TUESDAY Week 30 What makes monarch butterflies poisonous. The answer their lies in there diet. Monarchs feed exclusively on a common, flowering flowerring, plant known as milkweed, it is no coincidence that these insects are also called milkweed butterflies. Many contain substances toxic species of milkweed contains substinces that are toksick to most animals, but not to monarchs. In fact, the life of a / Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Comma 5 Hyphen 1 Period 1 Question Mark 1 Spelling 6 / Monarch Butterfly actually begins on a milkweed plant. Adult lay monarchs lays eggs on the plants. About four days later, the caterpillars eggs hatch to reveal larvae or caterpillers. These colorful worm like creatures, continue to live on the milkweed, feeding two on it for about too weeks. 128 2837.indb 128 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM science article: A Royal Butterfly Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 30 A Royal Butterfly The monarch is one of the largest, and colorfulest butterflies. The wing span on this insect are three to five inches accros. It’s dazzling, orange and black wings makes • verbs • commas • words that compare them easy to see. You might think that the bright colors would attracts predators, and make the monarch easy pray. However, predaters know better than to feast on this butterfly. The atractive colors serve as a warning not an invitation to predators. like a flashing red light at a corner, the colors scream, Stop! danger!” You may wonder whats so dangerous about this butterfly? Its’ body is poisinous! TUESDAY Week 30 What makes monarch butterflies poisonous. The answer lies in there diet. Monarchs feed exclusively on a common, flowerring, plant known as milkweed, it is no coincidence • end punctuation • commas that these insects are also called milkweed butterflies. Many species of milkweed contains substinces that are toksick to most animals, but not to monarchs. In fact, the life of a Monarch Butterfly actually begins on a milkweed plant. Adult monarchs lays eggs on the plants. About four days later, the eggs hatch to reveal larvae or caterpillers. These colorful worm like creatures, continue to live on the milkweed, feeding on it for about too weeks. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 129 129 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: A Royal Butterfly (cont.) science article WEDNESDAY Week 30 After two weeks each plump caterpillar is approximately inches two inchs long, and fully grown. It stops eating and then thread fasten spins a sticky, silk thred which it uses to fastens it self, sheds hanging inverted, to a stem or a leaf. It shed it’s skin of black white and yellow stripes and becomes a chrysalis (also called a pupa . This is the next stage of the monarchs / Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 6 Parentheses 2 Period 1 Spelling 5 gradually life cycle. The shell around the Pupa grajally hardens and becomes opaque. Inside the shell, the body of the former caterpillar transforms into a butterfly. From the out side, it looks look as if nothing is taking place, the metamorphosis (which means a “change in form” occurs in less than two weeks. THURSDAY Week 30 The butterfly unfolds its delacut wings as it emerges Error Summary Capitalization Language Usage 12 4 from the shell, blood pumps into the wings. After a few Punctuation: hours the butterfly can flap its wings good enough to fly Comma 1 Hyphen 1 Period 2 well indicates / away. This inducates the beginning of the Adult stage. four generations of monarchs are born each year Spelling 2 are butterflies from the first generation is born in march and are april. Those from the second is born in may and june. Third-generation monarchs are born in july and august. All of these butterflies live two to six weeks. Fourth generation butterflies, born in september and october, migrate south live and lives for six to nine months. 130 2837.indb 130 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing science article: A Royal Butterfly (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 30 After two weeks each plump caterpillar is approximately two inchs long, and fully grown. It stops eating and then spins a sticky, silk thred which it uses to fastens it self, • apostrophes • commas • parentheses hanging inverted, to a stem or a leaf. It shed it’s skin of black white and yellow stripes and becomes a chrysalis (also called a pupa. This is the next stage of the monarchs life cycle. The shell around the Pupa grajally hardens and becomes opaque. Inside the shell, the body of the former caterpillar transforms into a butterfly. From the out side, it look as if nothing is taking place, the metamorphosis (which means a “change in form” occurs in less than two weeks. THURSDAY Week 30 The butterfly unfolds its delacut wings as it emerges from the shell, blood pumps into the wings. After a few hours the butterfly can flap its wings good enough to fly • run-on sentences • adverbs • months away. This inducates the beginning of the Adult stage. four generations of monarchs are born each year butterflies from the first generation is born in march and april. Those from the second is born in may and june. Third-generation monarchs are born in july and august. All of these butterflies live two to six weeks. Fourth generation butterflies, born in september and october, migrate south and lives for six to nine months. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 131 131 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: The Fox and the Goat fable MONDAY Week 31 The Fox and the Goat / accident deep One day, a Fox fell by acident into a deap well. He one looked around for a means of escape, but couldnt find none. The rope for lowering buckets, and hoisting them up again, haul was at the top of the well so he had no rope to hall himself Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 5 Period 1 Spelling 7 any up with. He also couldn’t find no footholds for climbing up. exhausted The fox treaded water until he was exausted, he knew that Presently the end was near unless someone rescued him soon. Presintly, / the fox heard jostling noises at the top of the well. A Goat peering was piering over the ledge to see if there was any water in caught the well and he cawt sight of the fox. TUESDAY Week 31 “Hello, mr. Fox” he called down. Is the water fresh or stagnant”? merry distress The fox adopted a mery attitude to mask his destress. Trying to entice the goat, the fox responded that “the water Error Summary Capitalization 2 Punctuation: Comma 6 Quotation Mark 5 Spelling 4 excellent was too excellant to describe.” Come on down and see for yourself said the sly fox. / thirsty Indeed the Goat was exceedingly thristy. He had thought of nothing but his thirst for the past hour and he was elated at having found the well. Without thinking twice about it the goat plunged into the well. As soon as he did the fox pointed out the predicament that both of them were in now. 132 2837.indb 132 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM fable: The Fox and the Goat Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 31 The Fox and the Goat One day, a Fox fell by acident into a deap well. He looked around for a means of escape, but couldnt find none. • commas • run-on sentences • double negatives The rope for lowering buckets, and hoisting them up again, was at the top of the well so he had no rope to hall himself up with. He also couldn’t find no footholds for climbing up. The fox treaded water until he was exausted, he knew that the end was near unless someone rescued him soon. Presintly, the fox heard jostling noises at the top of the well. A Goat was piering over the ledge to see if there was any water in the well and he cawt sight of the fox. TUESDAY Week 31 “Hello, mr. Fox” he called down. Is the water fresh or stagnant”? The fox adopted a mery attitude to mask his destress. • personal names • dialogue • commas Trying to entice the goat, the fox responded that “the water was too excellant to describe.” Come on down and see for yourself said the sly fox. Indeed the Goat was exceedingly thristy. He had thought of nothing but his thirst for the past hour and he was elated at having found the well. Without thinking twice about it the goat plunged into the well. As soon as he did the fox pointed out the predicament that both of them were in now. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 133 133 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: The Fox and the Goat (cont.) fable WEDNESDAY Week 31 Don’t an “Do’nt worry, though, said the fox. I have a idea for Error Summary Language Usage 4 Punctuation: a way that we both can get out of this mess. If you place Apostrophe 1 your front hoofs on the wall and bent your head. I will climb Comma 2 Period 1 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 3 bend onto your back and jump out of the well. Then, when I am rested, I will help you get out. agreed The goat agrees. After all, what was the alternative. Spelling 3 So he steadied himself by leaning against the wall, with his front hoofs. The fox quickly scrambled up the goats back leaped and leeped to the top of the well. He cleared the ledge and too kept keeps running without even glancing back. Before he got to far, he heard the goat calling to him? THURSDAY Week 31 hesitated The fox hezetated, but returned to the well. He looked Error Summary Language Usage 1 Punctuation: down at the struggling goat, who bleated up to him “What Comma 3 are you doing. You promised to help me get out of here! Exclamation Point 1 Question Mark 4 Quotation Mark 4 your Why are you breaking you’re promise! “What a fool you are exclaimed the fox to the helpless Spelling 4 goat. What did you think would happen when you jumped into having the well. You shouldn’t have jumped before haveing a plan to get out. How could you expose yourself to dangers that you were unprepared to face And with that query the uncaring moral fox slipped away. And the morale of the story is: Look leap before you leaps. 134 2837.indb 134 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM fable: The Fox and the Goat (cont.) Daily Paragraph Editing Name WEDNESDAY Week 31 “Do’nt worry, though, said the fox. I have a idea for a way that we both can get out of this mess. If you place your front hoofs on the wall and bent your head. I will climb onto your back and jump out of the well. Then, when I am • dialogue • incomplete sentences • end punctuation rested, I will help you get out. The goat agrees. After all, what was the alternative. So he steadied himself by leaning against the wall, with his front hoofs. The fox quickly scrambled up the goats back and leeped to the top of the well. He cleared the ledge and keeps running without even glancing back. Before he got to far, he heard the goat calling to him? THURSDAY Week 31 The fox hezetated, but returned to the well. He looked down at the struggling goat, who bleated up to him “What are you doing. You promised to help me get out of here! • verbs • dialogue • end punctuation Why are you breaking you’re promise! “What a fool you are exclaimed the fox to the helpless goat. What did you think would happen when you jumped into the well. You shouldn’t have jumped before haveing a plan to get out. How could you expose yourself to dangers that you were unprepared to face And with that query the uncaring fox slipped away. And the morale or the story is: Look before you leaps. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 135 135 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Who Was Aesop? INFORMATIVE ESSAY MONDAY Week 32 Who Was Aesop? Most people have heard of aesop, the ancient greek /Storyteller. legendary credited This legendery author is creditted with hundreds / of fables, such as “The Lion and The mouse” and “the Fox fables and the Goat. Like other fabuls, Aesop’s stories typically / have feature animals. That has human characteristics and each Error Summary Capitalization 7 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Comma 4 Period 1 Question Mark 1 Quotation Mark 1 Spelling 5 story leads to a moral or lesson, about how to live. The stories that Aesop created are familiar to us 2,500 years later. But what do we know of the story teller himself. We surprisingly substantial know surprising little. There is no substanshial evidence in fact that Aesop even really existed. TUESDAY Week 32 / wrote Several Ancient sources write about Aesop as if he philosopher were a real person. The ancient Greek filosopher aristotle claimed claim that Aesop was born around 620 B.C. near the black sea. (Aristotle himself was born about 300 year’s later so he was not alive during Aesops time). The ancient Greek / / historian herodotus, who lived during the Fifth Century BC reported Error Summary Capitalization 11 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 3 Period 3 Semicolon 1 Spelling 4 report that Aesop had been a slave who resided in the Greek city-state of samos. Aesop’s first master was Xanthus, eventually his second master was Iadmon, who eventualy gave Aesop his freedom. Aesop died around 560 b.c. in delphi where he had gone royal delegate went as a royel delegit. 136 2837.indb 136 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM INFORMATIVE ESSAY: Who Was Aesop? Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 32 Who Was Aesop? Most people have heard of aesop, the ancient greek Storyteller. This legendery author is creditted with hundreds of fables, such as “The Lion and The mouse” and “the Fox • personal names • story titles • compound words • adverbs and the Goat. Like other fabuls, Aesop’s stories typically feature animals. That has human characteristics and each story leads to a moral or lesson, about how to live. The stories that Aesop created are familiar to us 2,500 years later. But what do we know of the story teller himself. We know surprising little. There is no substanshial evidence in fact that Aesop even really existed. TUESDAY Week 32 Several Ancient sources write about Aesop as if he were a real person. The ancient Greek filosopher aristotle claim that Aesop was born around 620 B.C. near the black sea. (Aristotle himself was born about 300 year’s later • personal names • place names • abbreviations • semicolons so he was not alive during Aesops time). The ancient Greek historian herodotus, who lived during the Fifth Century BC report that Aesop had been a slave who resided in the Greek city-state of samos. Aesop’s first master was Xanthus, his second master was Iadmon, who eventualy gave Aesop his freedom. Aesop died around 560 b.c. in delphi where he had went as a royel delegit. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 137 137 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Who Was Aesop? (cont.) INFORMATIVE eSSAY WEDNESDAY Week 32 Aesop biographical These biographicle details about Easop might be true Error Summary Language Usage 4 Punctuation: On the other hand Aristotle and Herodotus might have just Comma 4 repeated information that come from popular stories past Period 1 Question Mark 1 came passed down through the years. It was a very, long time ago, and verify historians Spelling 8 it is difficult to verrafy ancient sources. Modern historiuns records have not been able to find any official reckerds to prove that Aesop existed. Moreover even if Aesop had been a real person there is no evidence that he wrote any of the fables ever hundreds of fabels that made him famous. No one has never signed written discovered stories wrote in Aesop’s own hand or sined by him. come So where did Aesop’s fables came from. THURSDAY Week 32 Many writers from ancient times mentioned Aesop’s referred / fables. In their own writing. Mostly they refered to Aesop as themselves a storyteller. the stories theirselves are probably traditional; have they may even had come from Persia India or other places. The first known collection of Aesop’s fables appeared in the Error Summary Capitalization Language Usage 10 3 Punctuation: Comma 3 Hyphen 1 Period 3 Spelling 3 fourth-century BC. They were compiled by a Greek statesman was named demetrius but the collection were lost during the middle ages. The roman writer Phaedrus translated the stories into l atin during the first century b.c. His versions wisdom / appreciated express wit and wisdam. And are apreeshiated to this day. They have been translated into many other languages. 138 2837.indb 138 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing INFORMATIVE ESSAY: Who Was Aesop? (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 32 These biographicle details about Easop might be true On the other hand Aristotle and Herodotus might have just repeated information that come from popular stories past down through the years. It was a very, long time ago, and • verbs • commas • double negatives • end punctuation it is difficult to verrafy ancient sources. Modern historiuns have not been able to find any official reckerds to prove that Aesop existed. Moreover even if Aesop had been a real person there is no evidence that he wrote any of the hundreds of fabels that made him famous. No one has never discovered stories wrote in Aesop’s own hand or sined by him. So where did Aesop’s fables came from. THURSDAY Week 32 Many writers from ancient times mentioned Aesop’s fables. In their own writing. Mostly they refered to Aesop as • incomplete sentences a storyteller. the stories theirselves are probably traditional; • periods in history they may even had come from Persia India or other places. • hyphens The first known collection of Aesop’s fables appeared in the fourth-century BC. They were compiled by a Greek statesman named demetrius but the collection were lost during the middle ages. The roman writer Phaedrus translated the stories into latin during the first century b.c. His versions express wit and wisdam. And are apreeshiated to this day. They have been translated into many other languages. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 139 139 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Tortoises Bounce Back Science Article MONDAY Week 33 Tortoises Bounce Back When Charles darwin sailed to the Galápagos Islands (an archipelago [island cluster) near ecuador] in 1835, he noticed notices that each island had a distinctly different species observation of giant tortoises. It was this observasion, in part, that theory led leads him to develop his thiery of evolution through natural selection are Error Summary Capitalization 2 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Bracket 1 Comma 1 Ellipses 1 Parentheses 2 Underlined Words 4 Spelling 5 sellection. Today, all species of giant Galápagos tortoises is endangered. Sadly, one species (Chelonoidis elephantopus, or extinct C. elephantopus was already extint as early as 1850 . . or so people thought. Recently though, scientists discovered that after all this species may not be extinct afterall. TUESDAY Week 33 The giant tortoises of the galápagos i slands are some largest reptiles of the most large reptiels that still roam the planet. Adults weigh of some species way more than 600 pounds, and exceed five feet in length. Long ago, the crews’ of whaling ships hunted stored source Error Summary Capitalization 3 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Comma 2 Spelling 7 these animals as a sorce of food and oil. They storred the or live tortoises in a ships’ hull for months with out food nor water; they cruelly placed the animals on their backs to escaping prevent them from escape. People brought other threats to tortoises consumed the tortises. Rats from ships consoomed the tortoise egg’s / which caused tortoise populations to decline. Goats and Pigs vegetation eaten ate the vegatation that tortoises would have ate. 140 2837.indb 140 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM science article: Tortoises Bounce Back Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 33 Tortoises Bounce Back When Charles darwin sailed to the Galápagos Islands (an archipelago [island cluster) near ecuador] in 1835, he notices that each island had a distinctly different species • parentheses • brackets • scientific names • ellipses of giant tortoises. It was this observasion, in part, that leads him to develop his thiery of evolution through natural sellection. Today, all species of giant Galápagos tortoises is endangered. Sadly, one species (Chelonoidis elephantopus, or C. elephantopus was already extint as early as 1850 . . or so people thought. Recently though, scientists discovered that this species may not be extinct afterall. TUESDAY Week 33 The giant tortoises of the galápagos islands are some of the most large reptiels that still roam the planet. Adults of some species way more than 600 pounds, and exceed five feet in length. Long ago, the crews’ of whaling ships hunted • place names • apostrophes • verbs • double negatives these animals as a sorce of food and oil. They storred the live tortoises in a ships’ hull for months with out food nor water; they cruelly placed the animals on their backs to prevent them from escape. People brought other threats to the tortises. Rats from ships consoomed the tortoise egg’s which caused tortoise populations to decline. Goats and Pigs ate the vegatation that tortoises would have ate. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 141 141 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Tortoises Bounce Back (cont.) science article WEDNESDAY Week 33 An A article in the journal Current Biology, published in january 2012, announced a scientific study of 1,669 tortoises / living on i sabela i sland, one of the islands in the Archipelago. Biologists took blood samples and compared the genetic code of these tortoises against a genetic database of all tortoise Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Comma 2 Hyphen 1 Underlined Words 4 Spelling 2 quite species. The results were quiet surprising. Eighty four of the tortoises studied have one parent that is entirely of the C. elephantopus species. Some of those parents may still alive be allive today given that tortoises can live for more than a 100 years. If scientists find them they can start an breeding program to revive the species. THURSDAY Week 33 perplexed / Researchers are purplexed about how the Tortoises turned up on Isabela i sland in the first place? During darwins / time, the C Elephantopus tortoises were living on one of / the Southernmost islands of the archipelago. Isabela is on Researchers Error Summary Capitalization 6 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Period 2 Spelling 2 the northwestern edge of the archipelago. Reserchers now speculate speculates that the tortoises had been stowed aboard whaling / ships or Pirate ships and dumped at sea to lighten the load in the ships hulls. The tortoise’s cannot swim, but they float well good. They may have floated on the ocean currents and bred landed on Isabela, where they breeded with tortoises native to that island. In any case, the species apparently survived. 142 2837.indb 142 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing science article: Tortoises Bounce Back (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 33 A article in the journal Current Biology, published in january 2012, announced a scientific study of 1,669 tortoises living on isabela island, one of the islands in the Archipelago. • magazine titles • hyphens • scientific names Biologists took blood samples and compared the genetic code of these tortoises against a genetic database of all tortoise species. The results were quiet surprising. Eighty four of the tortoises studied have one parent that is entirely of the C. elephantopus species. Some of those parents may still be allive today given that tortoises can live for more than 100 years. If scientists find them they can start an breeding program to revive the species. THURSDAY Week 33 Researchers are purplexed about how the Tortoises turned up on Isabela island in the first place? During darwins time, the C Elephantopus tortoises were living on one of • apostrophes • scientific names the Southernmost islands of the archipelago. Isabela is on the northwestern edge of the archipelago. Reserchers now speculates that the tortoises had been stowed aboard whaling ships or Pirate ships and dumped at sea to lighten the load in the ships hulls. The tortoise’s cannot swim, but they float good. They may have floated on the ocean currents and landed on Isabela, where they breeded with tortoises native to that island. In any case, the species apparently survived. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 143 143 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: The Taj Mahal descriptive essay MONDAY Week 34 The Taj Mahal most Many people consider the Taj Mahal to be the more beautiful building in the world. The structure is located in /Taj Mahal agra, a small city in Northern i ndia. Built by the Mughal meant emperor shah jahan, the purpose was to honor his wife and to memorialize her. The buildings name is derived from the Error Summary Capitalization 7 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Hyphen 2 Parentheses 1 Sentence Structure 1 Spelling 1 name of the emperors wife, mumtaz mahal (which means “chosen one of the palace”. Her death in 1631 ended a marriage began mariage of nineteen years. Her grief stricken husband begun building the structure the following year. Construction and continued decoration continue for twenty two years. TUESDAY Week 34 / The Taj Mahal has five main parts: The main gateway Error Summary Capitalization 6 Language Usage 4 the garden the mosque the jawab (a building that mirrors Punctuation: the mosque, and the mausoleum (which has four minarets). Comma 7 Parentheses 1 Period 2 is The design of all of the parts are a blend of i ndian persian and i slamic architectural styles. the mausoleum itself is made Spelling 2 seems of cream-colored marble. The building seem to change colors intensity according to the intencity of the sunlight. the marble walls appear pink yellow or the color of apricots, depending on the they appear time of day or night In the evening, it appears warm brown. Later, when the smooth walls reflect the moon light, they take on a cool blue-gray cast 144 2837.indb 144 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing descriptive essay: The Taj Mahal Name MONDAY Week 34 The Taj Mahal Many people consider the Taj Mahal to be the more beautiful building in the world. The structure is located in • parentheses • dangling modifiers • hyphens agra, a small city in Northern india. Built by the Mughal emperor shah jahan, the purpose was to honor his wife and to memorialize her. The buildings name is derived from the name of the emperors wife, mumtaz mahal (which means “chosen one of the palace”. Her death in 1631 ended a mariage of nineteen years. Her grief stricken husband begun building the structure the following year. Construction and decoration continue for twenty two years. TUESDAY Week 34 The Taj Mahal has five main parts: The main gateway the garden the mosque the jawab (a building that mirrors the mosque, and the mausoleum (which has four minarets). The design of all of the parts are a blend of indian persian • parentheses • cultural identities • pronouns • run-on sentences and islamic architectural styles. the mausoleum itself is made of cream-colored marble. The building seem to change colors according to the intencity of the sunlight. the marble walls appear pink yellow or the color of apricots, depending on the time of day or night In the evening, it appears warm brown. Later, when the smooth walls reflect the moon light, they take on a cool blue-gray cast © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 145 145 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: The Taj Mahal (cont.) DESCRIPTIve essay WEDNESDAY Week 34 nearly identical has The mausoleums four wall’s are near identacle. Each have a wide arch in the center that is 108 feet (33 meters tall. The dome in the middle is 240 feet 73 meters) high, four smaller domes surround it. The dome shape has an effect were affect on sound. If you was to blow a single note on a would flute, it wood echo five time’s. Inside the mausoleum is Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 5 Punctuation: Apostrophe 4 Comma 3 Hyphen 1 Parentheses 2 Semicolon 1 Spelling 2 an eight sided marble chamber decorated with carvings and semiprecious stones. This area also houses two cenotaphs also known as false tomb’s surrounded by an intricately carved marble screen. Under the false tombs, at garden are level, is the real tombs, of mumtaz mahal and shah jahan. THURSDAY Week 34 Two identical buildings flank the mausoleum, they are faces the mosque, which face east, and its jawab (mirror image) / which faces west. These buildings are made mostly of Red / Sandstone, providing a contrast in color and texture with marble the white marbel of the mausoleum. Walking paths, fountains surrounds and ornamental trees adorn the garden that surround the Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Comma 3 Hyphen 1 Period 1 Spelling 1 capture buildings. The central pools of the garden captures the / reflection of the mausoleum. Making a striking picture. Calligraphy and fancy geometric designs of inlaid stones decorate decorates the buildings. Its no wonder that more than three-million people visit this architectural gem annually. 146 2837.indb 146 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing descriptive essay: The Taj Mahal (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 34 The mausoleums four wall’s are near identacle. Each have a wide arch in the center that is 108 feet (33 meters tall. The dome in the middle is 240 feet 73 meters) high, • apostrophes • semicolons • hyphens four smaller domes surround it. The dome shape has an affect on sound. If you was to blow a single note on a flute, it wood echo five time’s. Inside the mausoleum is an eight sided marble chamber decorated with carvings and semiprecious stones. This area also houses two cenotaphs also known as false tomb’s surrounded by an intricately carved marble screen. Under the false tombs, at garden level, is the real tombs, of mumtaz mahal and shah jahan. THURSDAY Week 34 Two identical buildings flank the mausoleum, they are the mosque, which face east, and its jawab (mirror image) which faces west. These buildings are made mostly of Red Sandstone, providing a contrast in color and texture with the white marbel of the mausoleum. Walking paths, fountains • commas • incomplete sentences • hyphens • verbs and ornamental trees adorn the garden that surround the buildings. The central pools of the garden captures the reflection of the mausoleum. Making a striking picture. Calligraphy and fancy geometric designs of inlaid stones decorates the buildings. Its no wonder that more than three-million people visit this architectural gem annually. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 147 147 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? PERSUASIVE ESSAY MONDAY Week 35 Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? Physical fitness is important to good health, and offering gives offerring physical education (P.E.) classes give students the compete chance to get in shape, stay in shape, compeat in sports and release energy each day. But how important is PE as a school Ultimately subject. Ultimitely, the grades you receive in P.E. affect your Error Summary Capitalization 7 Language Usage 1 Punctuation: Comma 5 Hyphen 1 Parentheses 1 Period 2 Question Mark 1 Spelling 4 / overall grade point average (GPA. That isn’t fair. Given that P.E. isn’t an academic subject. In my opinion, only subjects / / / such as Math Science History and English should count, academic because those are the only ones that lead to accademic success. P.E. grades should not affect your g p a. TUESDAY Week 35 One reason that P.E. grades should not count, is that capabilities people have different physical capabilties. Some students well perform good in p.e. class, but others do not. What about students who have health problems, such as asthma or or anemia. They may not be able to run as fast, nor as far as healthier Supporters grading more healthy kids can. Supportors of the current gradeing Error Summary Capitalization 4 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 2 Comma 3 Parentheses 2 Question Mark 2 Spelling 5 academic policy may argue, that people have different acaddemic abilities, too. Thats true, but arent those the very skills achievement that should count toward academic acheivement. Getting into Advanced Placement a.p. classes or into a good college should not depend on how well you do in P.E. 148 2837.indb 148 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM PERSUASIVE ESSAY: Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 35 Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? Physical fitness is important to good health, and offerring physical education (P.E.) classes give students the chance to get in shape, stay in shape, compeat in sports and • abbreviations • verbs • hyphens • end punctuation release energy each day. But how important is PE as a school subject. Ultimitely, the grades you receive in P.E. affect your overall grade point average (GPA. That isn’t fair. Given that P.E. isn’t an academic subject. In my opinion, only subjects such as Math Science History and English should count, because those are the only ones that lead to accademic success. P.E. grades should not affect your g p a. TUESDAY Week 35 One reason that P.E. grades should not count, is that people have different physical capabilties. Some students perform good in p.e. class, but others do not. What about students who have health problems, such as asthma or anemia. They may not be able to run as fast, nor as far as • abbreviations • words that compare • double negatives • end punctuation more healthy kids can. Supportors of the current gradeing policy may argue, that people have different acaddemic abilities, too. Thats true, but arent those the very skills that should count toward academic acheivement. Getting into Advanced Placement a.p. classes or into a good college should not depend on how well you do in P.E. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 149 149 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? (cont.) PERSUASIVE ESSAY WEDNESDAY Week 35 Another reason that P.E. grades should not count is encourage that its better for schools to encouridge kids to enjoy physical education instead of making kids do sports for a stressed grade. Students should not feel stresed out about doing well good in p.e. If they enjoy it, thats great, if they’re good athletes, that’s fine. But they shouldn’t feel pressured to Error Summary Capitalization 5 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Comma 4 Period 2 Semicolon 1 Spelling 6 athletic be atheletic just for a grade. Furthermore they shouldnt be competitive forced to be compettitive. Many of the sports that schools teach in P.E are games in which there is a winner, and a loser losser. In a math or english class for example every one can or an get a a, there are no winners nor losers. THURSDAY Week 35 eliminate suggesting Now I’m not sugesting that schools elimenate P.E. Error Summary Language Usage 7 Punctuation: classes. And I dont object to P.E. teachers giving letter Apostrophe 2 grades to students, some students in fact perform better if Comma 4 Semicolon 1 they are graded. However I strongly believe that P.E. grades Spelling 3 should not count toward a students overall GPA unless that requests who excels student specifically request it. (A student that exels in sports he she may depend on the A that him or her gets in a P.E. class to an boost a overall GPA. In that case, the school may count the adopt P.E. grade.) It is my recommendation that all schools adopts a new policy: Including P.E. grades in the GPA should be themselves optional, and students can decide for theirselves. 150 2837.indb 150 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing PERSUASIVE ESSAY: Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 35 Another reason that P.E. grades should not count is that its better for schools to encouridge kids to enjoy physical education instead of making kids do sports for a grade. Students should not feel stresed out about doing good in p.e. If they enjoy it, thats great, if they’re good • abbreviations • semicolons • words that compare • double negatives athletes, that’s fine. But they shouldn’t feel pressured to be atheletic just for a grade. Furthermore they shouldnt be forced to be compettitive. Many of the sports that schools teach in P.E are games in which there is a winner, and a losser. In a math or english class for example every one can get a a, there are no winners nor losers. THURSDAY Week 35 Now I’m not sugesting that schools elimenate P.E. classes. And I dont object to P.E. teachers giving letter grades to students, some students in fact perform better if • semicolons • commas • pronouns they are graded. However I strongly believe that P.E. grades should not count toward a students overall GPA unless that student specifically request it. (A student that exels in sports may depend on the A that him or her gets in a P.E. class to boost a overall GPA. In that case, the school may count the P.E. grade.) It is my recommendation that all schools adopts a new policy: Including P.E. grades in the GPA should be optional, and students can decide for theirselves. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 151 151 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Bud, Not Buddy BOOK REVIEW MONDAY Week 36 Bud, Not Buddy Capitalization 10 Language Usage a The novel Bud, Not Buddy is about an ten year old motherless boy who sets out to find his father. The story, written by christopher paul curtis takes place in michigan in 1936. the storys protagonist is the young boy bud caldwell an Error Summary / who has lived in a Orphanage since the age of six. The 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 3 Comma 5 Hyphen 4 Underlined Words 3 Spelling 2 novel follows Buds adventure’s as he travels from Flint to narrator grand rapids Michigan. Bud is also the narrater, and his voice is that of a good natured kid who is self reliant and honest determined. His voice provides many funny, and honnest moments in this sometimes dark story. TUESDAY Week 36 a Bud runs away from an harsh foster home, taking his suit case full of personal mementos. The treasures include advertise flyers that avvertise different jazz bands led by a musician believe named herman e calloway. Bud has reason to beleive that Calloway is his father (although hes wrong. the city mentioned gives Error Summary Capitalization 8 Language Usage 4 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Parentheses 1 Period 2 Spelling 5 destination on one of the flyers give Bud a destinashun for his search. who on his journey, Bud meets many people whom help him. A family waiting in line at the mission pretends that Bud prevents belongs to them, their kindness prevent Bud from going hungry that day. Another character, l efty l ewis, gives Bud assists a ride and asists him in finding Calloway. 152 2837.indb 152 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM BOOK REVIEW: Bud, Not Buddy Daily Paragraph Editing Name MONDAY Week 36 Bud, Not Buddy The novel Bud, Not Buddy is about an ten year old motherless boy who sets out to find his father. The story, written by christopher paul curtis takes place in michigan in • book titles • commas • hyphens • place names 1936. the storys protagonist is the young boy bud caldwell who has lived in a Orphanage since the age of six. The novel follows Buds adventure’s as he travels from Flint to grand rapids Michigan. Bud is also the narrater, and his voice is that of a good natured kid who is self reliant and determined. His voice provides many funny, and honnest moments in this sometimes dark story. TUESDAY Week 36 Bud runs away from an harsh foster home, taking his suit case full of personal mementos. The treasures include flyers that avvertise different jazz bands led by a musician • personal names • compound words named herman e calloway. Bud has reason to beleive that Calloway is his father (although hes wrong. the city mentioned on one of the flyers give Bud a destinashun for his search. on his journey, Bud meets many people whom help him. A family waiting in line at the mission pretends that Bud belongs to them, their kindness prevent Bud from going hungry that day. Another character, lefty lewis, gives Bud a ride and asists him in finding Calloway. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 153 153 9/26/12 12:50 PM EDITING KEY: Bud, Not Buddy (cont.) BOOK REVIEW WEDNESDAY Week 36 survival perceptive Buds “rules for survivul” are funny, but also perseptive. Rule number 3 says: “If you have to tell a lie, make sure its simple and easy to remember. Bud figures out many things on his own but he also recalls lessons that his mother taught him before she died. She used to say, When one door closes, Error Summary Capitalization 1 Language Usage 3 Punctuation: Apostrophe 5 Comma 5 Quotation Mark 3 Spelling 4 dont worry, because another door opens. Her statement expresses central / express one of the books centrel themes. Which many events show librarian shows. For example Bud discovers that the librarean he was depending on has moved away. Just then, as hes wondering what to do next a friend from the orphanage arrives. The then two boys than travel together for a while. THURSDAY Week 36 an excellent Reading Bud, Not Buddy is a exelent way to learn about life during the depression. It was a time when millions were of people was unemployed, thousands of homeless people lived in makeshift towns called Hoovervilles. The towns were named for president Herbert hoover, many people thought Hoover responsible Error Summary Capitalization 7 Language Usage 2 Punctuation: Apostrophe 1 Period 3 Underlined Words 3 Spelling 3 economy was responsable for letting the econnemy fail. When bud stays in the Hooverville outside of Flint, he learns about riding the rails, that was how many people went around looking for work in the 1930s. Bud tries to ride the rails but isnt fast enough. Missing the train turns out to be lucky, though. He finds Calloway and his search is over. 154 2837.indb 154 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Daily Paragraph Editing BOOK REVIEW: Bud, Not Buddy (cont.) Name WEDNESDAY Week 36 Buds “rules for survivul” are funny, but also perseptive. Rule number 3 says: “If you have to tell a lie, make sure its simple and easy to remember. Bud figures out many things on • run-on sentences • quotations • apostrophes his own but he also recalls lessons that his mother taught him before she died. She used to say, When one door closes, dont worry, because another door opens. Her statement express one of the books centrel themes. Which many events shows. For example Bud discovers that the librarean he was depending on has moved away. Just then, as hes wondering what to do next a friend from the orphanage arrives. The two boys than travel together for a while. THURSDAY Week 36 Reading Bud, Not Buddy is a exelent way to learn about life during the depression. It was a time when millions of people was unemployed, thousands of homeless people lived • book titles • periods in history • personal names in makeshift towns called Hoovervilles. The towns were named for president Herbert hoover, many people thought Hoover was responsable for letting the econnemy fail. When bud stays in the Hooverville outside of Flint, he learns about riding the rails, that was how many people went around looking for work in the 1930s. Bud tries to ride the rails but isnt fast enough. Missing the train turns out to be lucky, though. He finds Calloway and his search is over. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 155 155 9/26/12 12:50 PM FRIDAY – WEEK 1 Compare-and-Contrast Essay: Artful Defense Write a short essay to compare two other activities that are similar in some ways but different in other ways. For example, you might compare and contrast sumo wrestling and freestyle wrestling, tennis and table tennis, baseball and softball, or drawing and painting. Choose activities that you are somewhat familiar with. In your introductory paragraph, mention the two activities that you are comparing. In subsequent paragraphs, give details about the activities. Be sure to tell at least one way in which the activities are similar and one way they are different. FRIDAY – WEEK 2 How-to Article: How to Use Chopsticks Think of a skill, such as using chopsticks, that you know well and could teach others how to do. Write a brief how-to article to share your knowledge. Be sure to order the steps sequentially and use precise language that makes the process clear. Consider one of the following topics, or choose one of your own: • How to set the table • How to play the harmonica • How to play Sudoku FRIDAY – WEEK 3 Social Studies Article: Immigration and Ellis Island Write one or two paragraphs about the experience that immigrants had as they passed through Ellis Island. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • More than twenty million people left Europe and came to the United States between 1870 and 1910. • Ellis Island was the first impression that most immigrants had of the United States at the turn of the twentieth century. • The Ellis Island experience was probably a frightening one for many people entering the United States for the first time. 156 2837.indb 156 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM FRIDAY – WEEK 4 Myth: Echo and Narcissus Write one or two paragraphs about the myth of Echo and Narcissus. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Have you ever wondered how the ancient Greeks explained the scientific phenomenon of the echo? • The myth about Echo and Narcissus is one of the saddest in Greek mythology. • Echo thought she was clever, but she couldn’t fool Hera forever. FRIDAY – WEEK 5 Science Article: Sweet Insects In one or two paragraphs, explain what you have learned about honeybees. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • The life of a honeybee is truly amazing. • Although honeybees may look the same, they are not created equal. • Honeybees are smarter than you might think. FRIDAY – WEEK 6 Historical Fiction: Leaving Ireland Write one or two paragraphs about the fictional O’Donnell family. You may want to continue the story or tell what happened before they decided to leave Ireland. Include historical details about the Irish famine in the 1840s, the journey across the Atlantic Ocean, or starting a new life in Boston. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Danny trembled with excitement as he walked the dusty streets of Boston. • Patrick and Fiona O’Donnell had some serious thinking to do. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 157 157 9/26/12 12:50 PM FRIDAY – WEEK 7 Fable: The King’s Cupcakes Using the same voice as the narrator in “The King’s Cupcakes,” write one or two paragraphs that elaborate on or provide more background for one of the scenes in the story. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • “Let me bake an apple pie for you,” said Queen Appelonia, “and you will see what I mean.” • Because Queen Malicious was not as good as she was beautiful, no one in her kingdom tried to save her from the dragon. • Queen Plain Jane was furious. FRIDAY – WEEK 8 Science Article: A Natural Home Write one or two paragraphs describing a vivarium you have seen before or one that you would like to put together. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • A desert vivarium is easy to maintain. • A vivarium with frogs and salamanders can be very colorful and interesting. • If you mix desert plants and water-loving animals in a vivarium, the results can be a disaster. FRIDAY – WEEK 9 Realistic Fiction: Student Elections Write the beginning of a story that shows how characters deal with an ethical dilemma similar to the one described in “Student Elections.” Use the following story starters for ideas: • Janice was shocked to see how the bully treated the new kid. • Pedro saw Angelo cheat by copying from Alice’s test paper, and he wasn’t sure what to do about it. • Jerome knew who was spraying graffiti on the garage doors in his neighborhood. 158 2837_7_Friday01-36.indd 158 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 10/2/12 8:06 AM FRIDAY – WEEK 10 History Article: Triangle Shirtwaist Factory Fire Write one or two paragraphs about the fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory. You may want to focus on the working conditions inside the factory. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • The fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory was a terrible tragedy. • Could the fire at the Triangle Shirtwaist Factory have been prevented? FRIDAY – WEEK 11 Short Story: The Snake Charmer Briefly retell the story “The Snake Charmer” from the point of view of Daniel. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Daniel was quite startled when India wrapped herself around his waist. • “If she squeezes much tighter, I’ll probably pass out,” thought Daniel. • Daniel had no idea a python could be so strong. FRIDAY – WEEK 12 Geography Article: A Sea That’s Not a Sea Write one or two paragraphs about the Dead Sea. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • The Dead Sea is unlike any other lake in the world. • If you tried to swim underwater in the Dead Sea, you would find it impossible. • A fisherman would have a very disappointing day on the Dead Sea. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 159 159 9/26/12 12:50 PM FRIDAY – WEEK 13 Technology Article: Georges Méliès, Film Pioneer In one or two paragraphs, describe the contributions that Georges Méliès made to film technology. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Have you ever wondered how film technology developed? • The history of moving pictures goes back to the 1890s, when Georges Méliès was a young man. • If you enjoy films, you owe a debt of gratitude to Georges Méliès. FRIDAY – WEEK 14 Journal Entry: Diary of a Science Genius Imagine that you are going to enter a science fair. Write one or two diary entries describing your project or experiment and any difficulties you might encounter. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • The science fair is next week, and I still don’t have an idea for a project. • For the science fair, I think I’ll demonstrate what happens to plants that are exposed to loud music. • My project for last year’s science fair was a disappointment, so this year I really want to do something exciting. FRIDAY – WEEK 15 History Article: Shipwreck! Write one or two paragraphs about the crash between the Andrea Doria and the Stockholm. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • July 25, 1956, was a tragic day for the passengers and crew of the Andrea Doria. • A terrible accident took place in the Atlantic Ocean in the summer of 1956. • Not even radar could prevent a tragic accident caused by human error. 160 2837.indb 160 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM FRIDAY – WEEK 16 Science Article: The Amazing Spider Write one or two paragraphs for a science article about spiders. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Scientists studying spiders have uncovered some amazing facts about these little creatures. • Spiders are remarkable creatures. • Even Little Miss Muffet would be fascinated by these facts about spiders. FRIDAY – WEEK 17 Biography: The French Spider-Man Write one or two paragraphs about the life and exploits of Alain Robert. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Alain Robert climbs skyscrapers for the thrill of it—without a safety net. • What would you do if you were locked out of your apartment? • Alain Robert leads a dangerous life. FRIDAY – WEEK 18 History Article: Champions of Equality Write one or two paragraphs about how Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton helped secure voting rights for women in the United States. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Did you know that at one time women were not allowed to vote in the United States? • Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were brave women who stood up for their beliefs. • In the fight for women’s right to vote, Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton were fearless leaders. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837_7_Friday01-36.indd 161 161 10/3/12 8:14 AM FRIDAY – WEEK 19 Anecdote: Four Days Without a Cellphone “Four Days Without a Cellphone” is an anecdote—a short, amusing story about something that really happened. Write an anecdote about an incident in your life. Begin with one of the following sentences, or choose a topic of your own: • The first time I went ice-skating, I thought it would be easy. • When I first learned how to cook my own breakfast, it made me feel self-sufficient. • I know how to wash laundry now, but I made mistakes in the beginning. FRIDAY – WEEK 20 Science Article: Pink Flamingos In one or two paragraphs, describe the characteristics and life cycle of the flamingo. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Have you ever observed flamingos at a zoo or in the wild? • The flamingo is an unusual bird. • Flamingos like to gather in huge flocks. FRIDAY – WEEK 21 Informal Letter: Four Letters Write a one- or two-paragraph letter about a trip that you have taken or would like to take. Include the date, an appropriate salutation that ends with a comma, at least one body paragraph, an appropriate closing (also ending with a comma), and your signature. 162 2837.indb 162 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM FRIDAY – WEEK 22 News Article: Harbor Porpoises Make Comeback In one or two paragraphs, explain why the harbor porpoises left San Francisco Bay and why they are now returning. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Environmentalists report that the harbor porpoises have returned to San Francisco Bay. • It has been more than sixty years since they left, but the harbor porpoises are now coming back to the Bay Area. • The return of the “puffing pigs” has Bay Area tourists and residents excited. FRIDAY – WEEK 23 Biography: Billy Fisher, Pony Express Rider In one or two paragraphs, discuss the life of Billy Fisher. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • When Billy Fisher was a young man, he became a rider for the Pony Express. • The Pony Express hired many brave young men, Billy Fisher among them. • The life of a Pony Express rider was full of peril, as Billy Fisher certainly could have told you. FRIDAY – WEEK 24 History Article: Balto In one or two paragraphs, tell why Balto is honored and remembered. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Nome, Alaska, was in need of lifesaving diphtheria antitoxin, but airplanes couldn’t deliver it. • Balto will always be remembered as the lead sled dog that reached Nome, Alaska, with needed serum in 1925. • Balto was a brave, strong, and intelligent dog. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 163 163 9/26/12 12:50 PM FRIDAY – WEEK 25 Mystery: The Mystery of the Space Rocks Write one or two paragraphs describing Liam’s experience with his online order. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Liam was very excited at the prospect of getting a rock from Saturn. • Liam looked forward to sharing his amazing rock with his best friend, Adam. • The idea of getting a rock from another planet had never occurred to Liam— until the day he read an online ad. FRIDAY – WEEK 26 Tall Tale: Pecos Bill Rides a Tornado Write one or two paragraphs about the adventures of Pecos Bill. Include humor and exaggeration, which are typical of tall tales. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Pecos Bill never did things in small ways. • Did you ever wonder how the Grand Canyon was formed? • Death Valley wasn’t always below sea level. FRIDAY – WEEK 27 Interview: Chasing Twisters Joshua Wurman has always enjoyed building things. That pastime eventually led him to his unusual profession. Write three interview questions to ask a partner about one of his or her hobbies or pastimes that could lead to a profession or job later in life. Then conduct an interview and present your questions to your partner. Record the answers, and be sure to edit them. 164 2837.indb 164 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM FRIDAY – WEEK 28 Realistic Fiction: The Community Garden Write one or two paragraphs to describe the project undertaken by the narrator and people in the neighborhood where Pettigrew Apartments used to be located. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • The empty lot had become an eyesore. • There had to be something that could be done about the trash- and weed-filled lot in the middle of the neighborhood. • People can come together to make a difference in their communities. FRIDAY – WEEK 29 Health Article: Time to Sleep In one or two paragraphs, explain what happens during sleep and why sleep is important to people’s health. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Everyone needs sleep, but people have different sleep requirements. • Sleep is good for the body as well as the mind. • We spend about a third of our life sleeping. FRIDAY – WEEK 30 Science Article: A Royal Butterfly Write one or two paragraphs about monarch butterflies. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • The life cycle of a monarch butterfly is fascinating. • For a monarch butterfly, September and October are the best months to be born. • If you want to attract monarch butterflies to your yard, plant some milkweed. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 165 165 9/26/12 12:50 PM FRIDAY – WEEK 31 Fable: The Fox and the Goat In one or two paragraphs, write a fable that you are familiar with. Be sure to include the moral, or lesson, of the story. Or, if you prefer, write a new ending for “The Fox and the Goat.” Think about another way in which the fox might react to hearing the goat calling from the well. How might the goat respond? Choose an ending that changes the moral of the story, and be sure to write the new moral. FRIDAY – WEEK 32 Informative Essay: Who Was Aesop? In one or two paragraphs, describe who Aesop was. Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Almost everyone knows at least one of Aesop’s fables. • Strangely enough, Aesop may be as fictitious as a fable. • Most people think that Aesop was an ancient Greek writer. FRIDAY – WEEK 33 Science Article: Tortoises Bounce Back Write one or two paragraphs that provide scientific facts about giant Galápagos tortoises. Or write the first one or two paragraphs of a science article about another endangered or threatened species. Describe the plant’s or animal’s appearance and habitat, and provide other details about the species, including why it is endangered or threatened. 166 2837.indb 166 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM FRIDAY – WEEK 34 Descriptive Essay: The Taj Mahal The Taj Mahal is an impressive piece of architecture. In one or two paragraphs, describe a familiar building, bridge, tower, or other structure that you think is impressive. Focus on the appearance of the structure and the materials used in its construction. You may also want to include details about the history and purpose of the structure. FRIDAY – WEEK 35 Persuasive Essay: Should P.E. Affect Your GPA? Write one or two paragraphs for a persuasive essay that argues the opposite viewpoint to that of “Should P.E. Affect Your GPA?” Begin with one of the following sentences, or write your own: • Physical education is just as important as math, science, history, and English. • Physical education teaches teamwork, self-discipline, and sportsmanship. • For some students, physical education classes provide the only opportunity they’ll ever have to experience different sports. FRIDAY – WEEK 36 Book Review: Bud, Not Buddy Write one or two paragraphs for a review of a book or story that you have read recently. State the title and author. Give a brief summary of the plot. Describe the characters, setting, and central themes. You may want to describe one or two key events, too. Include your opinion of the book or story, but support your statements with meaningful facts from the text, such as carefully chosen quotations. Include information that might prompt readers to seek that book—or to choose a different book instead. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 167 167 9/26/12 12:50 PM Proofreading Marks Use these marks to show corrections. Mark / Meaning Example Take this out (delete). I love to to read. Add a period. It was late Make this a capital letter. First prize went to maria. Make this a lowercase letter. We saw a Black Cat. Fix the spelling. This is our hause. Add a comma. Goodnight Mom. Add an apostrophe. Its mine. Add quotation marks. Come in, he said. Add an exclamation point or a question mark. Help Can you help me Add a hyphen. Let’s go in line skating after school. Close the space. Foot ball is fun. / / house My favorite cereals oatmeal not Add parentheses or brackets. instant and granola are healthful. Add a word or phrase. The pen is mine. Underline the words. We read Old Yeller. Add a semicolon or a colon. 168 2837.indb 168 red Alex arrived at 400 Mia arrived later. Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Language Handbook Basic Rules for Writing and Editing Contents Capital Letters 170 Punctuation Marks 171 Period 171 Question Mark 171 Exclamation Point 171 Comma 172 Semicolon 173 Colon 173 Quotation Marks 174 Apostrophe 174 Hyphen 175 Parentheses 175 Brackets 175 Ellipses 175 Language Usage Plural Nouns 176 Adverbs 176 Sentence Structure 176 Misplaced Modifiers 176 Dangling Modifiers 176 © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 169 176 169 9/26/12 12:50 PM Capital Letters Always use a capital letter to begin: the first word of a sentence Today is the first day of school. the first word of a quotation, except when it continues the sentence She said, “Today is the first day of school.” But: “Today,” she said, “is the first day of school.” the salutation (greeting) and the closing in a letter Dear Grandma, Love, Sherry the names of days, months, and holidays The fourth Thursday in November is Thanksgiving. people’s first and last names, their initials, and their titles Mrs. Cruz and her son Felix met with Principal Bill C. Lee. Note: Use abbreviations of titles (for example, Mr., Mrs., Dr., and Capt.) only when you also use the person’s name. Did you see the doctor yesterday? Yes, I saw Dr. Carter. a word that is used as part of a name or to replace someone’s name I went with Dad and Aunt Terry to visit Grandma. the names of nationalities and languages Mexican, Cuban, and Nicaraguan people all speak Spanish. the names of ethnic or cultural groups or geographic identities There were Asian, Native American, and African dancers at the festival. the names of ships, planes, and space vehicles The president flew on Air Force One to see the USS Nimitz, a large U.S. Navy aircraft carrier. But: I went with my dad and my aunt to visit my grandma. Note: You must also underline the name of the ship, plane, or space vehicle. street names Palm Avenue, Cypress Street, Pine Boulevard cities, states, countries, and continents Los Angeles, California, United States of America; Paris, France; Asia, Europe, South America specific landforms and bodies of water Great Plains, San Francisco Bay, the Great Lakes buildings, monuments, and public places the White House, the Statue of Liberty, Yellowstone National Park historic events The Gold Rush began in 1849. The Civil War ended in 1865. 170 2837.indb 170 Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Capital Letters (continued) each word in the title of a book, story, poem, or magazine (except for a short, unimportant word such as a, an, at, for, in, and the, unless it is the first or last word of the title) The story “The Friendly Fruit Bat” appeared in Ranger Rick magazine and in the science book Flying Mammals. Note: Underline some titles, but use quotation marks for others. Book titles: Flowers for Algernon Magazine titles: Ranger Rick Movie titles: The Sound of Music TV shows: The Simpsons Newspapers: The Daily News But: Story titles: “The Fox and the Crow” Chapter titles: “In Which Piglet Meets a Heffalump” Poem titles: “My Shadow” Song titles: “Battle Hymn of the Republic” Titles of articles: “Ship Sinks in Bay” Punctuation Marks Use a period ( . ): to end a sentence that gives information to end a sentence that gives a mild command The Grand Canyon is in Arizona. Choose a story to read aloud. with abbreviations (days of the Jan. (January), Feb. (February), Mon. (Monday), week, months, units of measure, ft. (foot or feet), oz. (ounce or ounces), time, etc.) 8:00 A.M. with initials Dr. A. J. Cronin Use a question mark ( ? ) to end a question: • Did you choose a story to read? Use an exclamation point ( ! ) to end a sentence that expresses strong feelings: • Wow! That story is really long! © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 171 171 9/26/12 12:50 PM Punctuation (continued) Use a comma ( , ) after the salutation (greeting) of an informal letter and the closing of a letter: • Dear Uncle Chris, • Yours truly, Use a comma ( , ) to separate: a city and state, or a city and country El Paso, Texas London, England Note: Also use a comma after the state or country in a sentence. Coloma, California, is where gold was discovered in 1849. the date from the year October 12, 2004 Note: In a sentence, use a comma before and after the year. October 24, 1929, was the start of the Great Depression. two adjectives that tell about the same noun Nico is a witty, smart boy. Hint: Use these two “tests” to see if you need the comma: 1. Switch the order of the adjectives. If the sentence has the same meaning and still makes sense, you must use a comma. Nico is a smart, witty boy. (This is the same as Nico is a witty, smart boy.) Nico has dark brown hair. (It doesn’t make sense to say Nico has brown dark hair, so no comma is needed.) 2. Put the word “and” between the two adjectives. If the sentence still makes sense, you must use a comma. Nico is a witty, smart boy. (This is the same as Nico is a witty and smart boy.) Nico has dark brown hair. (It doesn’t make sense to say Nico has dark and brown hair.) items in a list or series (with three or more items) the name of the person that someone is addressing and the information that he or she is giving 172 2837.indb 172 Sarah won’t eat beets, spinach, or shrimp. Sam, I think that you should spend less money. I think that you should spend less money, Sam. I think, Sam, that you should spend less money. Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Punctuation (continued) Use a comma ( , ) to signify a pause: between a quotation and the rest of the sentence after an interjection at the beginning of a sentence after a short introductory word or phrase that comes before the main idea of a sentence before and after a word or phrase that interrupts the main idea of a sentence before and after a phrase that renames or gives more information about the noun that precedes it before the conjunction (and, but, for, nor, or, so, yet) in a compound sentence Mrs. Flores said, “It’s time to break the piñata now!” “I know,” answered Maya. Boy, that’s a lot of candy! Oh well, I misjudged. Clearly, no one wants dessert. After all that candy, nobody was hungry for cake. The cake, however, was already on the picnic table. Mrs. Lutz, our neighbor, gave Mom the recipe. The cake, which had thick chocolate frosting, melted in the hot sun. The frosting was melted, but the cake was great. Note: A complete sentence includes a subject and a verb, and it expresses a complete thought. A compound sentence joins two simple sentences with a conjunction; each of the two parts of a compound sentence has its own subject and verb. Maya likes the beach, but she prefers the mountains. But: Maya likes the beach but prefers the mountains. Use a semicolon ( ; ) to join two simple sentences that are closely related: • The party ended at 4:00; the guests left by 4:15. • The party was great fun; however, the cleanup was exhausting. Use a colon ( : ) as follows: to introduce a list of items The café has a few specialties: soup, salad, and dessert. to introduce a sentence, a question, or a quotation The principal asked an important question: Who will host the Book Fair while the librarian is on vacation? to show time The bell rings at 8:20, 12:35, and 3:35 on school days. © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 173 173 9/26/12 12:50 PM Punctuation (continued) Use quotation marks ( “ ” ): before and after dialogue (words spoken by someone) “This was the best birthday party ever!” Maya said. Note: A period at the end of a sentence with dialogue always goes inside the quotation marks. A question mark or an exclamation point that follows what the speaker says also goes inside quotation marks. Maya’s sister agreed, “Everyone had fun.” “May I have a piñata at my birthday party?” Martin asked. Mr. Flores replied, “ You bet!” Be careful! When the words that tell who is speaking come before the quotation, put the comma outside the quotation marks. When the words that tell who is speaking come after the quotation, put the comma inside the quotation marks. Before: Mrs. Flores asked, “Do you want chocolate cake?” After: “I sure do,” said Martin. around a word or phrase being discussed The word “piñata” is written with a special letter. around an expression or a word used in an unusual or ironic way She was “down to the wire” turning in her history essay. Ben thinks the carousel is a “children’s” ride. around the definition of a word The Latin word geologia means “the study of the earth.” Use an apostrophe ( ’ ) to show possession. When there is just one owner, add an apostrophe first and then add s. cat + ’s cat’s The cat’s dish was empty. When there is more than one owner, just add an apostrophe after the plural s (unless the plural word is irregular, as with the words children and people). cats + ’ cats’ All of the cats’ cages at the shelter were large. But: The children’s cat was in the last cage. Other people’s pets were making lots of noise. Use an apostrophe ( ’ ) when you put two words together to make a contraction: • I + am • do + not 174 2837.indb 174 I’m don’t Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Punctuation (continued) Use a hyphen ( - ): between numbers in a fraction to join two words that form an adjective that usually comes before a noun One-half of the candies have walnuts, and one-quarter have almonds. Beth eats low-fat foods and drinks sugar-free beverages. Use parentheses ( ( ) ): to set off a word or words that interrupt, explain, or qualify a main idea in a sentence but that are not essential to the sentence Many U.S. households (about 40 percent) have dogs as pets. Note: If the interruption comes at the end of a sentence, place the end punctuation after the closing parenthesis. If it comes after a phrase that ends with a comma, place the comma after the closing parenthesis. Dogs are popular pets (although cats are also popular). I didn’t like the main course (which was grilled tofu), but I ate it anyway. to set off a nonessential sentence in a paragraph Dogs are popular pets. (Cats are also popular.) Note: The end punctuation goes inside the parentheses. Use brackets ( [ ] ) to set off a word or words that are enclosed by parentheses: • Jill loved the band (especially the lead singer, Jeff [always dressed in wild, eccentric outfits], who also played guitar) that she saw Saturday night. Note: Use punctuation with brackets in the same way you would use punctuation with parentheses. Use ellipses ( . . . ) for a pause or break: • I couldn’t understand the math problem . © Evan-Moor Corp. • EMC 2837 • Daily Paragraph Editing 2837.indb 175 . . until my friend Angie helped me. 175 9/26/12 12:50 PM Language Usage A plural noun names more than one person, place, or thing. If the noun ends in y, change the y to i and add es. Some plural nouns are irregular. fly fli + es flies story stori + es stories child children person man woman men women people tooth teeth goose geese An adverb describes action. Some adjectives can be changed to adverbs with ly. Some common adverbs do not end in ly. awkward + ly awkward quick quick + ly awkwardly quickly He ran fast. We worked harder than ever before. The girls sang high but the boys sang low. The book was well worth reading. Sentence Structure A modifier is a word, phrase, or clause that describes another word, phrase, or clause. A modifier that is separated from the word or words that it modifies is called a misplaced modifier. Wrongly placed adverbs such as I have only a dozen eggs. only, just, and almost can change (In this example, only modifies a dozen.) the meaning of a sentence. I only have a dozen eggs. Hint: Identify the modifier. Then ask yourself which word in the sentence you want to modify. (In this example, only modifies have.) Wrongly placed phrases can be confusing (and even funny). The children left to play video games on their bikes. Only I have a dozen eggs. (In this example, only modifies I.) Change to: The children on their bikes left to play video games. A dangling modifier is a phrase or clause that does not logically agree with the word or words that it seems to modify. Note how each sentence has been edited to fix the dangling modifier. Stashed away in a drawer, he forgot his textbook. (It was the textbook, not the boy, that was in a drawer!) To get the job, an application needs to be filled out. (It’s a person, not the application, that wants the job!) 176 2837.indb 176 He forgot his textbook, which was stashed away in a drawer. To get the job, you need to fill out an application. Daily Paragraph Editing • EMC 2837 • © Evan-Moor Corp. 9/26/12 12:50 PM Language Fundamentals Your comprehensive resource for reproducible grade-level grammar, mechanics, and usage practice. Includes over 160 student activity pages, scaffolded to accommodate students’ various skill levels. Review pages in test format are perfect for test prep, while sentence-editing exercises provide students with a real-world application of skills. 240 reproducible pages. Correlated to state standards and Common Core State Standards. Grade 1 EMC 2751 Grade 2 EMC 2752 Grade 3 EMC 2753 Grade 4 EMC 2754 Grade 5 EMC 2755 Grade 6+ EMC 2756 About Evan-Moor Educational Publishers About Evan-Moor Educational Publishers At Evan-Moor, our products are written, edited, and tested by professional educators. We strive to provide the best products and service possible. Evan-Moor’s materials are directed to teachers and parents of prekindergarten through 8th-grade students, and most materials are correlated to state and Common Core State Standards. We address all major curriculum areas, including: Reading Math ELL Geography Arts & Crafts Science Early Childhood Writing Social Studies Teacher Resources How We Began In 1979, Joy Evans and Jo Ellen Moore were team-teaching first grade in a Title I school. They decided to put ideas that worked for their students into a book. They joined with Bill Evans (Joy’s brother) to start Evan-Moor Educational Publishers with one title. Who We Became Evan-Moor now offers over 450 titles, many of which have won awards for quality, creativity, and innovation. Our materials are used in classrooms around the world. Our Mission Now, as then, we are dedicated to helping children learn. We think it is the world’s most important job, and we strive to assist teachers and parents in this essential endeavor. Evan-Moor products are available at fine teacher supply stores and bookstores everywhere and at www.evan-moor.com. Daily Practice Books Perfect Supplements to Your Core Curriculum! • Practice for every day of the school year • Help students prepare for standardized testing ResearchProven Spaced practice contributes to retention of skills. • Correlated to state and Common Core State Standards Daily 6-Trait Writing 160 reproducible pages. Grades 1–8 Daily Phonics 208 reproducible pages. Grades 1–6+ Daily Language Review 128 reproducible pages. Daily Paragraph Editing 176 reproducible pages. Grades 1–8 Grades 2–8 Daily Academic Vocabulary 160 reproducible pages. Daily Reading Comprehension 192 reproducible pages. Daily Science 192 reproducible pages. Daily Geography Practice 160 reproducible pages. Grades 1–8 Daily Math Practice 128 reproducible pages. Daily Word Problems: Math 112 reproducible pages. Grades 1–6+ Grades 1–6+ Grades 1–6+ Daily Handwriting Practice 112 reproducible pages. All Grades Grades 1–6+ Grades 1–6+ Building Spelling Skills 160 reproducible pages. Grades 1–6+ ISBN 978-1-60963-832-0 EMC 2837i ISBN 9781609639105 0 23472 02837 2 9 781609 638320